Perspectives on the pharmacist's 'product': a narrative review

Autor: David A. Holdford
Rok vydání: 2021
Předmět:
mesh:Pharmacy
Entrepreneurship
pharmacists
health knowledge attitudes practice
Pharmacist
pharmacy service hospital
Pharmaceutical Science
Pharmacy
RM1-950
Review
entrepreneurship
mesh:Models
Theoretical

law.invention
mesh:Community Pharmacy Services
pharmacies
pharmaceutical services
Pharmacy and materia medica
law
mesh:Entrepreneurship
mesh:Drug Prescriptions
mesh:Marketing
mesh:Pharmacists
Service (business)
mesh:Pharmacy Service
Hospital

models theoretical
business.industry
Value proposition
mesh:Pharmacies
review literature as topic
Public relations
mesh:Health Knowledge
Attitudes
Practice

community pharmacy services
drug prescriptions
RS1-441
Product (business)
mesh:Pharmaceutical Services
marketing
CLARITY
Strategic management
Therapeutics. Pharmacology
mesh:Review Literature as Topic
business
Zdroj: Pharmacy Practice
Pharmacy Practice, Vol 19, Iss 2, p 2430 (2021)
ISSN: 1885-642X
Popis: Clarity about the pharmacist’s “product” is fundamental to developing and communicating the value of pharmacy offerings. It i s clear within the profession that pharmacists use their scope of knowledge and technical skills to address medicatio n - related needs of individuals and populations. However, confusion still remains in the professional and public literature about what a pharmaci st precisely produces for society. Is it a drug, service, program, solution, or something else? As the professio n evolves from one that focuses on dispensing drugs to a profession that seeks to achieve positive patient health outcomes, pharmacists need to bette r conceptualize and articulate what they produce. This narrative review explores ideas from the marketing, business strategy, and entrepreneurship literature to discuss diverse perspectives on the pharmacist’s product. The four perspectives are the produc t as (1) a tangible product, (2) an intangible service, (3) a “smart, connected” good or service, and (4) a solution to a customer problem in whatever form provided. Based upon these perspectives, the pharmacist’s product can be any combination of tangible or intangi ble, face - to - face or virtual offering produced by pharmacists that seeks to satisfy medication - re lated needs and wants of pharmacy patients and customers. Ideas discussed in this review include the total product concept, classification schemes from the ser vices marketing literature, the theory of service - dominant logic, the concepts of “smart, connect ed” products and industrialized intimacy, and the jobs - to - be - done framework. These various perspectives offer lessons for pharmacists on how to innovate when serving patients and customers and to communicate the pharmacist’s value proposition to the people they serve.
Databáze: OpenAIRE