PHARMACISTS AND PHYSICIANS, “THE BLURRING LINES OF PAIN HEALTHCARE,” AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION CRITICAL DISTINCTION AND D.E.A. LAW ENFORCEMENT OVERREACH INTO MEDICAL PROTOCOLS

An infographic titled 'The Distinction in Care: Physicians, Pharmacists, and Patient Safety', featuring a stethoscope and a capsule, emphasizing the differences in education and training that define the scope of practice.
A stethoscope and a pill capsule are featured alongside the title 'The Distinction in Care: Physicians, Pharmacists, and Patient Safety', emphasizing the differences in education and training between these healthcare professionals.

“..Pharmacists and physicians differ significantly in their training and scope of practice. While pharmacists receive four years of post-graduate education focused on medication, physicians undergo four years of post-graduate education, followed by three to seven years of residency, accumulating significantly more clinical training and experience in diagnosing and treating patients. Although pharmacists are medication experts, they are not trained to serve as primary care physicians..”

re-reported from youarewithinthenorms.com

NORMAN J CLEMENT RPH., DDS, NORMAN L. CLEMENT PHARM-TECH, MALACHI F. MACKANDAL PHARMD, BELINDA BROWN-PARKER, IN THE SPIRIT OF JOSEPH SOLVO ESQ., INC., SPIRIT OF REV. IN THE SPIRIT OF WALTER R. CLEMENT BS., MS, MBA. HARVEY JENKINS, MD, PH.D., IN THE SPIRIT OF C.T. VIVIAN, JELANI ZIMBABWE CLEMENT, BS., M.B.A., IN THE SPIRIT OF THE HON. PATRICE LUMUMBA, IN THE SPIRIT OF ERLIN CLEMENT SR., EVELYN J. CLEMENT, WALTER F. WRENN III., MD., JULIE KILLINGSWORTH, RENEE BLARE, RPH, DR. TERENCE SASAKI, MD LESLY POMPY MD., CHRISTOPHER RUSSO, MD., NANCY SEEFELDT, WILLIE GUINYARD BS., JOSEPH WEBSTER MD., MBA, BEVERLY C. PRINCE MD., FACS., NEIL ARNAND, MD., IN THE SPIRIT OF  RICHARD KAUL, MD., IN THE SPIRIT OF LEROY BAYLOR, JAY K. JOSHI MD., MBA, AISHA GARDNER, ADRIENNE EDMUNDSON, ESTER HYATT PH.D., WALTER L. SMITH BS., IN THE SPIRIT OF BRAHM FISHER ESQ., MICHELE ALEXANDER MD., CUDJOE WILDING BS, MARTIN NJOKU, BS., RPH., IN THE SPIRIT OF DEBRA LYNN SHEPHERD, BERES E. MUSCHETT, STRATEGIC ADVISORS

A pharmacist in a CVS pharmacy is assisting a concerned woman who is looking at a prescription label with a worried expression.
Lawyers for CVS—the second-largest pharmacy chain by number of pharmacists—have written. “They do not examine or diagnose patients.”
A group of diverse healthcare professionals, including male and female doctors, are engaged in a serious discussion. They appear concerned and focused, wearing medical coats and some are wearing masks.
The critical distinctions between the education and professional responsibilities of physicians versus pharmacists.

What’s the difference between pharmacists and physicians?

The American Medical Association emphasizes the critical distinctions between the education and professional responsibilities of physicians versus pharmacists. While pharmacists possess extensive expertise in medication management, the text argues they lack the thousands of hours of clinical residency and diagnostic training required to safely practice medicine independently.

Graphic promoting the protection of the patient-physician relationship, highlighting the American Medical Association's stance against 'scope creep' in medical legislation.

The organization actively opposes “scope creep,” which refers to legislative efforts that would allow non-physicians to perform medical tasks like diagnosing or treating patients based on isolated lab tests. By highlighting the vastly different rigorous standards of medical school, the AMA advocates for a physician-led care model to ensure patient safety.

Through various resources and reports, the AMA reinforces the importance of maintaining high educational standards to ensure optimal health outcomes. While acknowledging that pharmacists are medication experts, the text emphasizes that they lack the education to manage chronic diseases or conduct physical exams independently.

The AMA seeks to protect patient safety by maintaining that medical treatment should be supervised by doctors rather than based on isolated laboratory tests performed over a pharmacy counter.

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“Education matters much more than convenience. It is the keystone of high-quality care and patient safety. Patients know it too—more than 90% say a physician’s years of education and training are vital to optimal patient care.

A group of pharmacists in white lab coats discussing medication management in a pharmacy setting, with some wearing masks.

Nevertheless, some legislation seeks to allow pharmacists to diagnose and treat patients over the pharmacy counter, relying only on the results of a laboratory test. But this would put patients at risk, as an isolated lab test depicts only a sliver of a patient’s overall health—not enough to determine a course of treatment. In addition, pharmacists are not trained to diagnose patients.

A group of healthcare professionals engaged in a serious discussion at a table, with a female physician at the forefront, emphasizing the differences in training and responsibilities between pharmacists and physicians.

Lawmakers should therefore exercise extreme caution when considering legislation that would expand the scope of practice for pharmacists. The AMA is fighting scope creep and defending the practice of medicine against scope-of-practice expansions that threaten patient safety.

Infographic comparing the training and roles of physicians and pharmacists, highlighting differences in education duration, clinical training hours, and patient safety concerns.

Trained to do different things

One of the most obvious distinctions between physicians and pharmacists is the length, focus, and depth of their training. Pharmacists receive four years of postgraduate education, including 1,740 hours of clinical training. They have no residency requirement.

By contrast, physicians get four years of post-graduate education plus three to seven years of residency. Included in this is some 12,000–16,000 hours of clinical training—which is, at minimum, more than six times as much as what pharmacists get. All of that is preceded by the four years it typically takes to earn a bachelor’s degree.

Infographic illustrating that a single lab test is a small part of a comprehensive medical evaluation, highlighting the importance of patient history, physical examination, differential diagnosis, comorbidities, and social determinants of health.

In addition, physician education includes performing differential diagnoses, treating patients for a broad range of illnesses and diseases, and caring for patients during each phase of the lifecycle. Pharmacist training does not include making a diagnosis, being exposed to patients with any specific medical conditions or even conducting a physical examination.

Pharmacist education focuses on learning about medications and includes extensive scientific laboratory study, but not on training in providing medical care to patients.

A pharmacist in a white lab coat interacts with two women in a pharmacy setting, with a 'Walgreens' sign visible in the background.

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The patient-care activities in pharmacy school include “interacting with patients, ensuring continuity of care, educating patients on the use of medications,” but do not include making a diagnosis or developing a differential diagnosis, performing a physical or mental examination, or managing chronic disease.

Meanwhile, pharmacy-school curriculum standards do not require exposure to patients with any specific medical conditions or exposure to asepatients of any particular age.

This is of concern because the test-and-treat laws often proposed to expand pharmacists’ scope of practice would allow these nonphysicians to treat any patient over the pharmacy counter for conditions they may not have ever seen before.

The upshot: Pharmacists are medication experts, but they are not trained to take on the role of primary care physician.

Infographic comparing the roles of physicians and pharmacists, highlighting that pharmacists are medication experts while physicians are diagnostic and physiological experts.

That having been said, there are arrangements known as collaborative practice agreements that—when used correctly—can be a viable solution to allow pharmacists to manage medication safely on a physician-led team. A collaborative practice agreement should be specific to a single patient, an individual physician, and an individual pharmacist.

A group of medical professionals, including a doctor in the foreground with a stethoscope, stands in a dimly lit room, looking serious and attentive.
“While pharmacists are highly trained and licensed professionals, they did not attend medical school and are not trained as physicians.”

No room for expanded scope

While pharmacists play a vital role in the health care team, the best way to support high-quality care is to keep physicians as the leaders. In fact, pharmacists are already dangerously overburdened.

According to a 2019 Pharmacy Workforce Center report, 91% of pharmacists in chain settings rated their workload as high or excessively high, and 75% said that they have so much work to do that everything cannot be done well.

And even pharmacies themselves agree that it’s not the business of pharmacists to practice as physicians.

A close-up view of a report titled 'COGS HITS LRALLUET' with pills scattered on a table, featuring CVS branding in the background, showcasing a formal meeting setting.
“While pharmacists are highly trained and licensed professionals, they did not attend medical school and are not trained as physicians.”

“While pharmacists are highly trained and licensed professionals, they did not attend medical school and are not trained as physicians,” lawyers for CVS—the second-largest pharmacy chain by number of pharmacists—have written. “They do not examine or diagnose patients.

Infographic comparing physician training and pharmacist training, highlighting their different focuses, scopes, and gaps in education.

They do not write prescriptions. And with only very limited exceptions permitted by law, pharmacists are bound to respect a prescribing doctor’s professional medical judgment about which medications are appropriate to treat a particular patient under the doctor’s care.”

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A pharmacy counter filled with medication bottles and paperwork, highlighting a report stating that 91% of chain pharmacists report high workload and 75% cannot perform their current duties well due to volume.

REFERENCES:

1.Visit AMA Advocacy in Action to find out what’s at stake in fighting scope creep and other advocacy priorities the AMA is actively working on.

2.Learn more with the AMA about great resources that set the record straight for policymakers on scope of practice. The AMA is one of the only national organizations that has created hundreds of advocacy tools for medicine to use when fighting scope creep.

3. Learn more with the AMA about what sets apart physicians and nonphysicians.

4.

the dea’S WAR ON SMALL black OWN pharmacies

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