During the much latter part of our two week trip to the UK I ended up with some notable chest congestion. I went to a local pharmacy and picked up some OTC chest congestion medicine at Bootes. The person running the register was the pharmacist and after a quick consultation I ended up with some much stronger behind the counter medicine. The consultation involved five sentences and maybe 30 seconds:
Are you taking anything else for this?
How long have you been coughing?
Do you have a fever, sore throat or heacache?
Here *hands me a box* this is much stronger.
Don't take anything else for this
On getting back to the US the medicine ran out so I went to get some more. Out of curiosity I took the box and looked for something with the same amount of active ingredients. Not surprisingly I didn't find any in the OTC section so I asked the pharmacist and was told that I would need a doctor's prescription for that combination/amount (Unfortunately my wife has since thrown the empty box out and I don't remember what they were). The OTC stuff I ended up with is noticeably less affective
As I sit here contemplating calling my doctor, having to take the time offered due to their busy scheduling, likely sitting in the waiting room for 20 minutes and paying $25 to see a doctor for 5 minutes before getting a prescription for something that took me 30 seconds and cost me $0 extra to get in Scotland it seems to me that offering pharmacists a slight latitude to hand out some slightly stronger medications might be something to investigate.
While I would imagine there are a lot of liability issues we would have to navigate it is my uneducated impression that this would reduce the number of required doctor's visits, lessening the burdens on families, employers and insurance companies for relatively straightforward diagnoses like 'he is coughing, lets give him something for a cough'
I do wonder if this would result in a noticeable negative impact on the general practitioner community though
Are you taking anything else for this?
How long have you been coughing?
Do you have a fever, sore throat or heacache?
Here *hands me a box* this is much stronger.
Don't take anything else for this
On getting back to the US the medicine ran out so I went to get some more. Out of curiosity I took the box and looked for something with the same amount of active ingredients. Not surprisingly I didn't find any in the OTC section so I asked the pharmacist and was told that I would need a doctor's prescription for that combination/amount (Unfortunately my wife has since thrown the empty box out and I don't remember what they were). The OTC stuff I ended up with is noticeably less affective
As I sit here contemplating calling my doctor, having to take the time offered due to their busy scheduling, likely sitting in the waiting room for 20 minutes and paying $25 to see a doctor for 5 minutes before getting a prescription for something that took me 30 seconds and cost me $0 extra to get in Scotland it seems to me that offering pharmacists a slight latitude to hand out some slightly stronger medications might be something to investigate.
While I would imagine there are a lot of liability issues we would have to navigate it is my uneducated impression that this would reduce the number of required doctor's visits, lessening the burdens on families, employers and insurance companies for relatively straightforward diagnoses like 'he is coughing, lets give him something for a cough'
I do wonder if this would result in a noticeable negative impact on the general practitioner community though