Projecting supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies based on the number of prescriptions and system dynamics modeling

Abstract Background Pharmacists play an important role in promoting people’s health in Japan, which has an aging population. Hence, it is necessary that the distribution of pharmacists meets the population’s needs in each region. This study projects the future supply and demand for pharmacists in ph...

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Main Authors: Yasuhiro Morii, Seiichi Furuta, Tomoki Ishikawa, Kensuke Fujiwara, Hiroko Yamashina, Katsuhiko Ogasawara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-11-01
Series:Human Resources for Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12960-020-00524-5
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spelling doaj-052287b5957e40258f7c0ee07d8b6fe32020-11-25T04:07:19ZengBMCHuman Resources for Health1478-44912020-11-0118111310.1186/s12960-020-00524-5Projecting supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies based on the number of prescriptions and system dynamics modelingYasuhiro Morii0Seiichi Furuta1Tomoki Ishikawa2Kensuke Fujiwara3Hiroko Yamashina4Katsuhiko Ogasawara5Faculty of Health Sciences, Hokkaido UniversityThe Department of Pharmacy, Hokkaido University of ScienceFaculty of Health Sciences, Hokkaido UniversityFaculty of Health Sciences, Hokkaido UniversityFaculty of Health Sciences, Hokkaido UniversityFaculty of Health Sciences, Hokkaido UniversityAbstract Background Pharmacists play an important role in promoting people’s health in Japan, which has an aging population. Hence, it is necessary that the distribution of pharmacists meets the population’s needs in each region. This study projects the future supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies to consider an optimal distribution of pharmacists. Methods The future supply of pharmacists working in pharmacies in Hokkaido is projected using system dynamics modeling, according to their career path. The demand is projected based on the number of prescriptions, sourced from publicly available sources. The analysis period is 2015–2040. The estimated demand is converted into the number of pharmacists and the sufficiency is evaluated using sufficiency ratio (supply/demand ratio). Sensitivity analyses of the sufficiency ratio were conducted to estimate the effects of changes in parameters such as national exam pass rate, enrollments, attrition rates, the number of prescriptions per pharmacist, and diffusion of newly licensed pharmacists. Results The projected supply, in 2025 and 2040, is 1.24 and 1.56 times, respectively, as that in 2015 and the demand is 1.11 and 0.98 times, respectively. In 2015, although the sufficiency ratio in Hokkaido overall is 1.19, the ratios are higher in urban medical areas and lower than 1 in rural medical areas, such as Minamihiyama, Emmon, and Nemuro. By 2040, the sufficiency ratios are greater than 1 for all areas except for Emmon and higher than 2 in some areas. The sensitivity analyses found that the sufficiency ratio was most sensitive to diffusion of newly licensed pharmacists and the number of prescriptions per pharmacist. Conclusion Optimal distribution should be considered, as the results reveal a possible shortage in the number of pharmacists in rural medical areas in 2015–2025. Conversely, as the demand is projected to decrease after 2025 with a population decrease, future supply should be determined in order not to cause an oversupply after 2025. Refinements of the projection model should be conducted since the related factors such as the roles of pharmacists will change over time.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12960-020-00524-5Health human resourcingPharmacistsForecastingSystem dynamics modeling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yasuhiro Morii
Seiichi Furuta
Tomoki Ishikawa
Kensuke Fujiwara
Hiroko Yamashina
Katsuhiko Ogasawara
spellingShingle Yasuhiro Morii
Seiichi Furuta
Tomoki Ishikawa
Kensuke Fujiwara
Hiroko Yamashina
Katsuhiko Ogasawara
Projecting supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies based on the number of prescriptions and system dynamics modeling
Human Resources for Health
Health human resourcing
Pharmacists
Forecasting
System dynamics modeling
author_facet Yasuhiro Morii
Seiichi Furuta
Tomoki Ishikawa
Kensuke Fujiwara
Hiroko Yamashina
Katsuhiko Ogasawara
author_sort Yasuhiro Morii
title Projecting supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies based on the number of prescriptions and system dynamics modeling
title_short Projecting supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies based on the number of prescriptions and system dynamics modeling
title_full Projecting supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies based on the number of prescriptions and system dynamics modeling
title_fullStr Projecting supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies based on the number of prescriptions and system dynamics modeling
title_full_unstemmed Projecting supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies based on the number of prescriptions and system dynamics modeling
title_sort projecting supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies based on the number of prescriptions and system dynamics modeling
publisher BMC
series Human Resources for Health
issn 1478-4491
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Abstract Background Pharmacists play an important role in promoting people’s health in Japan, which has an aging population. Hence, it is necessary that the distribution of pharmacists meets the population’s needs in each region. This study projects the future supply and demand for pharmacists in pharmacies to consider an optimal distribution of pharmacists. Methods The future supply of pharmacists working in pharmacies in Hokkaido is projected using system dynamics modeling, according to their career path. The demand is projected based on the number of prescriptions, sourced from publicly available sources. The analysis period is 2015–2040. The estimated demand is converted into the number of pharmacists and the sufficiency is evaluated using sufficiency ratio (supply/demand ratio). Sensitivity analyses of the sufficiency ratio were conducted to estimate the effects of changes in parameters such as national exam pass rate, enrollments, attrition rates, the number of prescriptions per pharmacist, and diffusion of newly licensed pharmacists. Results The projected supply, in 2025 and 2040, is 1.24 and 1.56 times, respectively, as that in 2015 and the demand is 1.11 and 0.98 times, respectively. In 2015, although the sufficiency ratio in Hokkaido overall is 1.19, the ratios are higher in urban medical areas and lower than 1 in rural medical areas, such as Minamihiyama, Emmon, and Nemuro. By 2040, the sufficiency ratios are greater than 1 for all areas except for Emmon and higher than 2 in some areas. The sensitivity analyses found that the sufficiency ratio was most sensitive to diffusion of newly licensed pharmacists and the number of prescriptions per pharmacist. Conclusion Optimal distribution should be considered, as the results reveal a possible shortage in the number of pharmacists in rural medical areas in 2015–2025. Conversely, as the demand is projected to decrease after 2025 with a population decrease, future supply should be determined in order not to cause an oversupply after 2025. Refinements of the projection model should be conducted since the related factors such as the roles of pharmacists will change over time.
topic Health human resourcing
Pharmacists
Forecasting
System dynamics modeling
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12960-020-00524-5
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