One patients experience of shingles...
“One morning I woke up and felt several bumps on my back on the right side. After about a day it became intensely itchy. At this point, the area was more annoying than painful.
“When the bumps became more like blisters, I phoned my doctor for an appointment and she confirmed I had shingles. She gave me an antiviral medication to stop the virus from multiplying. It ended up being an extremely unpleasant experience, which lasted for several weeks. The rash did stay on one side of my body. It also became extremely painful. Since my nieces have never had chickenpox; I ended up staying away from them until my shingles had healed as we did not want to risk them getting chickenpox from me.
“Shingles is no joke. The rash itself wasn’t too terrible, but the nerve pain made my head spin. It felt like someone burning, punching and cutting me at the same time. It was as if I was being electrocuted and nothing could stop the random zaps. At one moment in the depths of pain, I thought ‘I won’t survive if this lasts more than a few days’.
“My doctor tried me on a few different tablets to deal with the pain and eventually gabapentin helped a little. The pain went on for months and I still need to wear a hat when I go out as any wind on the part where I had shingles still brings on horrible pain. My wife had the shingles vaccine and I’d been too busy to find time to go and have it...”
CPD record example (unplanned learning)
I completed an educational module in Pharmacy Magazine – a clinical update on Shingles. This updated my knowledge about differentiating shingles from other conditions, red flags, and also the changes in the shingles vaccination programme. (Expand here on some specific aspects that filled in gaps in your existing knowledge/skills).
Include an example of how the people using your pharmacy have benefited from your learning, for example:
- Participation in a public health campaign about shingles and the vaccine programme
- Being more confident to deal with requests relating to possible shingles signs and symptoms
- Agreeing a rapid referral process with your local GP practice/s.
Further reading
- Shingles: the Green Book chapter 28a (from September 1, 2023).
- Clinical Knowledge Summaries – Shingles.
- Patient professional articles. Shingles: causes, symptoms and treatment
- Le P, Rothberg M. Herpes zoster infection BMJ 2019
- UK Health Security Agency. Introduction of Shingrix vaccine for the whole programme and expansion of eligible cohorts letter
Patient resources