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Hospital pharmacists are concerned about the negative effects of
  pharmaceuticals both on the environment itself as well as on animals, humans
  and patients. Consequently, the European Association of Hospital Pharmacists
  (EAHP) welcomes the adoption of the Communication on a European Union
  Strategic Approach to Pharmaceuticals in the Environment.  
It is noted that standards to prevent environmental contamination
  are not complied with at all production sites, especially those that are
  situated beyond Europe’s borders. Responsibility has to be taken to ensure
  that drugs and their components distributed and used in the European Union
  (EU) are produced without avoidable environmental pollution. Measures
  supporting the uptake of greener manufacturing and the improvement in the
  design and implementation of environmental risk assessment are a good step in
  the right direction and should be pursued in a timely and transparent manner
  by the European Commission (EC). 
Some drugs are not metabolised and degraded into inactive
  substances by patients or animals treated with these drugs. For example some
  antimicrobials, hormones, cytotoxic agents or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory
  drugs (NSAIDs) may be partly excreted unchanged and remain pharmacologically
  active. The consequences of environmental contamination may be significant,
  e.g. active antimicrobials may induce and trigger antimicrobial resistance in
  patients and/or animals, thus impeding the national, European and global
  investments underway in the field of antimicrobial resistance. The need to
  minimise these negative consequences is of utmost importance and EAHP fully
  supports the measures put forward by the EC on the reduction and management
  of waste. A multi-stakeholder approach addressing, on the one hand, the
  design and manufacturing of pharmaceuticals and, on the other hand, best
  practice sharing among healthcare professionals is a sensible endeavour. The
  concentration of pharmaceuticals in the environment can be decreased only
  through meaningful and constant cooperation of all relevant actors. 
The Communication, however, lacks acknowledgement of the fact
  that pharmaceuticals in the environment are also detrimental to patient
  safety. As healthcare professionals in direct contact with patients, hospital
  pharmacists as well as doctors and community pharmacists should be encouraged
  and enabled to educate other healthcare professionals as well as patients
  about the impact of antimicrobials, hormones, cytotoxic agents and NSAIDs on
  the environment. Consequently, EAHP is calling on the EC and national
  governments to ensure continued training of healthcare professionals in best
  practices in relation to the prevention of pharmaceutical contamination. Such
  training should be provided both at undergraduate and post graduate level, as
  well as through lifelong learning modules. | 
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