FIP works closely with the press to support accurate, timely and impactful reporting on pharmacy practice, pharmacy education and pharmaceutical science and global health developments. FIP provides journalists and media professionals with access to policy developments, research, publications, campaigns and initiatives shaping health care worldwide.
FIP also supports media engagement through dedicated press registration and press benefits during the annual FIP world congress, offering accredited journalists opportunities to access scientific sessions, interviews with global pharmacy leaders and key developments from across the profession.
If you would like to join our press list to receive press releases, please email press@fip.org with your name, publication, job title and email address.
Buenos Aires • 28 August 2016
“Health care can no longer be separated from social issues,” said Dr Carmen Peña, President of the International Pharmaceutical Federation, at the opening of the 76th World Congress of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences today in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Pharmacists and other health care professionals need to be more concerned with continuity, integration of processes and socio-health coordination, which is an important but often forgotten role of community pharmacies, she said.
Dr Peña used her opening address to focus on people — patients and health care professionals. “People” is one of the three areas in her “Two times two” plan for pharmacy. “Today’s patients have new demands. New needs. They are increasing in number and age. Many of our health systems were created in the 20th century for a society of patients with acute illnesses, but nowadays we live in a society of patients with chronic illnesses, many of whom require polymedication,” she said.
This new profile demands new areas of action from pharmacists in terms of home care as well as health care. Self-care and non-prescription medicines also deserve greater attention in this new era of health care, she added.
Dr Peña called for policies that enable cooperation and care coordination between health care professionals, with respect for their various functions, for the benefit of patients. But she also said that fostering trust, improving communication and sharing information should include non-health professionals, such as hospital managers, lawyers and economists, all of whom are essential to building a new concept of health care.
Dr Peña gave particular mention to clinical records. Patients should be the ones to decide the extent to which information is shared among health professionals, empowering them to look after their own health.
“We need to rethink health care. We need to break down barriers and prevent patients from getting lost in labyrinths of specialties and bureaucracy. The system should follow patients, rather than patients following the system,” she said.
Notes for editors
About “Two times two”: The FIP President’s plan for pharmacy, “Two times two”, calls for two actions (professional development and promotion and defence of pharmacy’s interests) at two levels (individual and collective). People, services and sustainability are the three focal areas.
About FIP: The International Pharmaceutical Federation (FIP) is the global federation of national associations of pharmacists and pharmaceutical scientists, and is in official relations with the World Health Organization. Through its 137 member organisations, it represents over three million practitioners and scientists around the world. www.fip.org
About the World Congress of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences: FIP’s 76th annual World Congress of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences is being held in Buenos Aires, Argentina, from 28 August to 1 September. Some 2,200 pharmacists and pharmaceutical scientists from 98 countries will talk about how pharmacy can play a bigger part in reducing the global burden of disease at the congress this week.
PRESS CONTACT
Lin-Nam Wang, communications manager
Email linnam@fip.org
Tel +31 70 302 1987