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Journal ArticleDOI

A systematic review of community pharmacist therapeutic knowledge of dietary supplements

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TLDR
Global community pharmacist knowledge of dietary supplements appears to be poor and community pharmacists have an professional responsibility to provide accurate health information about dietary supplements as they do for any other therapies they provide to patients.
Abstract
Background Internationally, the use of dietary supplements has been growing rapidly. Patient support for pharmacist sales of nutritional and dietary supplements is also strong. The increase in demand for nutritional and dietary supplements and subsequent advice about these products, however, makes it necessary that pharmacists maintain a contemporary knowledge of the area. Aim of review This systematic review was conducted to examine the current evidence regarding the level of the nutritional and dietary supplement knowledge of community pharmacists and their understanding of their therapeutic effects. Method Electronic databases including Medline, Scopus, Embase, CINAHL, Scifinder and the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register were searched. Studies assessing nutritional knowledge of pharmacists in community pharmacies were eligible for inclusion. All languages and study designs were considered. Study results were analysed and pharmacist knowledge scores were given out of 100 %. Results From 5594 studies identified, nine met the inclusion criteria. Each study tested pharmacist knowledge with predetermined questions calculating results as the number of questions answered correctly. These knowledge scores were converted to a percentage score for the purpose of this paper. The median knowledge score across all papers was 64 %. A lack of studies assessing community pharmacists’ knowledge of commonly sold vitamins and minerals was observed. Conclusions Global community pharmacist knowledge of dietary supplements appears to be poor. Community pharmacists have an professional responsibility to provide accurate health information about dietary supplements as they do for any other therapies they provide to patients. Further research including that which assesses pharmacists’ therapeutic knowledge of commonly sold vitamins and minerals is suggested.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nutrient Supplement Use among the Chinese Population: A Cross-Sectional Study of the 2010⁻2012 China Nutrition and Health Surveillance.

TL;DR: The nutrient supplement use proportion was highest amongst the participants with a health problem, and the participants who had no idea about their health conditions were the least likely to use the nutrient supplements (p < 0.05).
Journal ArticleDOI

Dietary Supplement Use, Knowledge, and Perceptions Among Student Pharmacists.

TL;DR: Dietary supplement use was higher in this sample of student pharmacists than the general population and students thought supplement knowledge was important but their education was inadequate, and students had limited knowledge and need more education on dietary supplements.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Prevalence of Dietary Supplement Use among College Students: A Nationwide Survey in Japan

TL;DR: The prevalence of dietary supplement use increased with grade among college students in Japan and was higher in medical and pharmaceutical college students compared to others, while most students obtained information about dietary supplements via the Internet and typically purchased the supplements from drug stores.
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Community pharmacist's responsibilities with regards to traditional medicine/complementary medicine products: A systematic literature review

TL;DR: The purpose of this study was to determine pharmacist's responsibilities with regards to TM/CM products that have been discussed in the literature since 2000 to take into account three influential factors strategically: the scope of TM/ CM products, objectives of pharmacists' involvement and the perspectives of key stakeholders.
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Protecting consumers from fraudulent health claims: A taxonomy of psychological drivers, interventions, barriers, and treatments.

TL;DR: The taxonomy presents an integrative and accessible theoretical framework for designing evidence-informed interventions to protect consumers from fraudulent health claims and has broad implications for numerous topical issues including the design of anti-fraud campaigns, efforts to address the growing problem of health-related misinformation, and for countering the polarisation of politically sensitive health issues.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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