Allergies: Can Pharmacists Fill The Gap? |
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The lead Editorial in this week’s edition of The Lancet discusses the increasing prevalence of allergies and says that patients who suffer with them are being badly let down due to lack of specialist facilities and resources. |
Community pharmacists could help
bridge this treatment gap. Spending on doctors’ bills, prescription
drugs, and other medical care to relieve allergy symptoms such as watery eyes,
stuffy noses, wheezing etc almost doubled in the USA between 2000 and 2005. In
the UK some 3·3 million people have a recorded diagnosis of allergic rhinitis,
roughly the same proportion of the population as in the USA. |
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Although there is no consensus on the reasons
for the increasing burden of allergies, the ‘hygiene hypothesis’ has solid
support. First proposed by David Strachen in the 1980s, this hypothesis suggests
that children exposed to poor hygiene and increased infections in early life
have lower levels of allergic diseases later in life. In other words,
squeaky-clean modern life could be a contributing factor. Environmental
pollution could also be contributing. It concludes: "Community pharmacists are keen, willing, and able to do more in primary care and so should grab the opportunity to step up and fill the cavernous hole of allergy knowledge, treatment, and management." |
| Source: http://www.thelancet.com |
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