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In a world with 20 kinds of lettuce-grown antibodies, the
pharmacist becomes the guide—not just to safety, but to
strategic personalization.
2. Localized Production and Oversight
In decentralized systems, pharmacists may oversee:
• On-site growing operations, coordinating with
agricultural tech teams.
• Harvest timing, to match peak protein yield.
• Quality control, verifying identity and potency
before encapsulation.
• Final formulation, creating personalized blends of
bioactives tailored to clinical need.
Instead of filling bottles, pharmacists finish therapies—
bringing the last mile of biologic assembly closer to the
point of care.
3. Data-Guided Feedback Loops
With AI integration, pharmacists become critical nodes in
decentralized care networks:
• Monitoring real-world outcomes via apps and
wearable-linked systems.
• Adjusting formulations and dosages dynamically
based on tolerance, biomarkers, or lifestyle changes.
• Feeding population-level data back into AI models
that improve future biologics.
They are no longer just gatekeepers of the past—they are
feedback engineers for the future.
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