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Public Health Education and Promotion Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences

Chapman University

2017

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Public Health Education and Promotion

Utilizing Three Years Of Epidemiological Data From Medical Missions In Cambodia To Shape The Mobile Medical Clinic Formulary, Jeany Kim Jun, Junia S. Koo, Amy Y. Kang, Deborah B. Chien, Albert Shim, Dale Knutson, Eda M. Kim Mar 2017

Utilizing Three Years Of Epidemiological Data From Medical Missions In Cambodia To Shape The Mobile Medical Clinic Formulary, Jeany Kim Jun, Junia S. Koo, Amy Y. Kang, Deborah B. Chien, Albert Shim, Dale Knutson, Eda M. Kim

Pharmacy Faculty Articles and Research

Objective: The purpose of this project was to gather epidemiological data on common diseases and medications dispensed during medical mission teams to Cambodia to shape the mobile medical clinic formulary.

Methods: Data for patients seen during week-long, mobile, medical clinics was collected in Cambodia during Septembers 2012 to 2014. Patient’s gender, age, weight, blood pressure, glucose, pertinent laboratory values, diagnoses, and medications dispensed were collected. Blood pressure and glucose were measured in patients 18 years and above. Data collected onto paper intake forms were transferred onto spreadsheets without patient identifying information and analyzed for aggregate means, common diseases, and most …


Implementing Pharmacy-Based Travel Health Services: Insight And Guidance From Frontline Practitioners, Tania Gregorian, Albert Bach, Karl Hess, Keri Hurley, Edith Mirzaian, Jeff Goad Jan 2017

Implementing Pharmacy-Based Travel Health Services: Insight And Guidance From Frontline Practitioners, Tania Gregorian, Albert Bach, Karl Hess, Keri Hurley, Edith Mirzaian, Jeff Goad

Pharmacy Faculty Articles and Research

PURPOSE In California, the passage of SB493 in July of 2013 was a milestone in advancing pharmacy practice. Among other things, the new legislation allows pharmacists to provide routine immunizations without a protocol and furnish medications for international travelers for conditions not requiring a diagnosis. When developing a pharmacist-run travel health service, consideration must be given to multiple important factors, including pharmacist training, physician partnership, logistics, from scheduling to documentation, and the resources necessary to provide a travel health service.5 This article sets out to provide guidance and insight to pharmacists seeking to implement a travel health service.

SUMMARY Travel …