Wesley Nuffer, Angela Thompson, Kelly Stenhoff, Mistie Bjork
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Current community pharmacy practice faces several substantial pressures affecting the business model. Transitioning to a more patient-centered focus and providing additional direct patient care services that will eventually be billed for and reimbursed by third-party payers is a strategy for evolving this practice. This manuscript describes the impact of a 4-year funded project involving a network of independent pharmacies partnering with an academic pharmacy school to implement direct patient care services in diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Eleven independent pharmacies participated in the practice transformation project, receiving direct support from pharmacy faculty to build an infrastructure and begin offering formalized programs for diabetes and cardiovascular disease management. Each pharmacy selected which services they would implement and build across the 4 years. An emphasis was placed on establishing bi-directional communication with medical provider offices and identifying high-risk patients with these disease states to set up monthly meetings to optimize their health. All pharmacies successfully established 1 or more services in the areas of diabetes and/or cardiovascular disease and reported regular communication with local providers to summarize services and discuss specific patient concerns. All pharmacies implemented a blood pressure monitoring service at their location and 9 (82%) successfully provided a self-monitoring blood pressure program. Five pharmacies received accreditation to offer diabetes self-management education services, and 2 pharmacies received recognition to provide the National Diabetes Prevention Program. Seven pharmacies established appointment-based monthly counseling with high-risk patients. Implementation of these services is an important initial step in prioritizing direct patient care in the community pharmacy setting.
期刊介绍:
JMCP welcomes research studies conducted outside of the United States that are relevant to our readership. Our audience is primarily concerned with designing policies of formulary coverage, health benefit design, and pharmaceutical programs that are based on evidence from large populations of people. Studies of pharmacist interventions conducted outside the United States that have already been extensively studied within the United States and studies of small sample sizes in non-managed care environments outside of the United States (e.g., hospitals or community pharmacies) are generally of low interest to our readership. However, studies of health outcomes and costs assessed in large populations that provide evidence for formulary coverage, health benefit design, and pharmaceutical programs are of high interest to JMCP’s readership.