COVID-19 pandemic: the role of community-based pharmacy practice in health equity.
Youssef M RomanPublished in: International journal of clinical pharmacy (2022)
The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the landscape of primary care practice, creating new gaps in chronic disease management and worsening existing health disparities. Community-based pharmacy practices have played a critical role in responding to the pandemic; however, their role in promoting health equity and addressing existing health disparities has not been fully characterized. The objective of this commentary is to highlight some of the challenges and opportunities to cultivate an equitable plain field for communities to overcome significant health crises. Moreover, this commentary underscores the potential role of integrating community-based pharmacies into the public health infrastructure. It is uncommon to find an individual or an organization that has not been impacted by the pandemic. As painful as it has been to lose so many lives due to COVID-19 infection, it is critical to dedicate the time to reflect on how we arrived at this point. Compounding this global health crisis, the pandemic did not weigh equally on all community members, but rather some population groups carried the brunt of the pandemic more than others. The disproportionate burden of COVID-19 has uncovered significant gaps in our healthcare system and the global public health response. Understanding how we arrived at that point in the pandemic is a crucial first step toward achieving health equity. While many factors have led us onto the pandemic path, using national and global health frameworks to address health disparities and monitor health inequalities are worth discussing to delineate a roadmap to optimal population health. As these pandemic lessons challenge the status quo throughout communities, facing these new realities allows us to envision a roadmap for social justice, health equity, and innovative models to optimize health. Leveraging community-based pharmacy services could promote health equity, close growing health gaps, increase access to health care, and rapidly detect and respond to public health threats.