| Literature DB >> 32944275 |
Logan T Murry1, Christopher P Parker1, Rachel J Finkelstein1, Matthew Arnold2, Korey Kennelty1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Remote, centralized clinical pharmacist services provided by board-certified clinical pharmacists have been shown to effectively assist in chronic disease management. We assess the feasibility of implementing a pharmacist-led, remote, centralized pharmacy service to improve A1c levels in patient with diabetes in a rural clinic setting.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes; Family medicine; Pharmacists; Pilot; Remote pharmacy service; Return on investment; Rural; Team-based care; Telehealth
Year: 2020 PMID: 32944275 PMCID: PMC7488227 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-020-00677-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Administrative and patient-contact activities of clinical pharmacists
| Administrative activities | • Access EMR and collect medical record data to evaluate gaps in therapy for the patient. • Document all patient and provider encounters and time (minutes) used for each activity to determine appropriate billing. • Provide composite tracking and progress reports for all subjects treated by a given physician. • Completed necessary prior authorizations for medication insurance coverage. |
| Patient-contact activities | • Email, phone, and/or text message the patient every 1–2 weeks × 2 months then monthly to engage patient with self-monitoring. • Use motivational interviewing to conduct monthly follow-up assessment and counseling for medication adherence, side effects, exercise, coronary heart disease (CHD) knowledge, weight management, diet, tobacco use, alcohol use, and associated disease state education. • Assess stages of change for key issues such as exercise, diet, weight management, and tobacco use [ • Provide frequent contact with patient to improve preventive health screening. Develop an action plan that addresses gaps in preventive health screening or guideline-concordant therapy, update medication list, and send recommendations for medication changes. |
Fig. 1Example of pharmacy workflow
Scaled patient responses from telephone surveys
| Scaled question | Average response value* |
|---|---|
| The pharmacist was helpful | 4.75 |
| The pharmacist reduced medication costs | 3.16 |
| Frequency of pharmacist calls was appropriate | 4.3 |
*1 = least agreement, 5 = most agreement
Patient responses to open-ended questions
| Survey question | Open-ended response |
|---|---|
| Why did you agree to visit with a pharmacist? | “Doctor recommendation.” |
| “Wanted different opinion.” | |
| “Wanted more information about medications.” | |
| “Uncontrolled chronic conditions.” | |
| What was your reasoning for your rating of the pharmacist call helpfulness? | “Provided more information/improved [my] understanding.” |
| “Reminders helped increase adherence and home monitoring.” | |
| “Pharmacist was a good listener, expressed empathy and compassion.” | |
| What was your reasoning for your rating of pharmacist reducing medication costs? | “Pharmacists helped lower [my] medication costs.” |
| What was your reasoning for your rating of talking with a pharmacist was beneficial to my health? | “Pharmacist provided detailed explanations about [my] meds.” |
| “Pharmacists improved BP, A1c.” | |
| “Increased awareness about health conditions.” | |
| “Helped understand importance of daily monitoring.” | |
| “Pharmacist was accessible to answer [my] questions.” | |
| “Pharmacist worked to find best solution for [my] specific needs.” | |
| What did you like about having the pharmacist talk to you? | “Pharmacist available to answer [my] questions.” |
| “Pharmacist had unique ideas to improve health.” | |
| “Pharmacist helped with lifestyle behaviors (e.g. meal modification and alcohol consumption).” | |
| “Clarified areas of confusion.” | |
| “Increased accessibility to healthcare professional.” | |
| If the service is continued, what can be done to improve it? | “Nothing.” |
| “Be clearer about when service/communication is ending.” | |
| “No negative experiences.” | |
| “Lower cost of medications.” | |
| Overall comments | “Would like pharmacist to be available for questions as they arise.” |
| “Very thankful and appreciative of the service.” | |
| “Frustrated by ceased communication.” | |
| “Would like to talk less to pharmacists now that things are under control.” | |
| “Pharmacist cared, asked question, gave information, and tried to get me on the right track and right medications.” | |
| “Provided additional information and improved understanding of meds and disease state.” | |
| “Calls helped increase adherence and home monitoring.” | |
| “Pharmacist was available when clinic wasn’t open.” | |
| “Pharmacist was a good listener, expressed empathy and compassion.” |
Provider feedback to overall program experience
| Provider experience comments | |
|---|---|
| “Pharmacists did reminder calls for labs and needing to schedule appointments.” | |
| “Minimum of 30 minutes spent on each prior authorization, sometimes up to an hour.” | |
| “Would allow me to see more patients since pharmacist would collect information prior to the clinic visit.” | |
| “Helped improve the care of my patients by following up with them before clinic visits.” | |
| “Liked having them watch out for drug interactions and renal dosing adjustments.” | |
| “Med errors are often reason for hospital or ED visit. Working with pharmacists helps prevent that.” | |
| “Would prefer pharmacists document directly into EMR.” | |
| “Figure out what could be billed through insurance so patients can keep using the service.” | |
| “Pharmacists tailored service for patient’s needs.” |
Potential return on investment (ROI) based on pharmacy billable services
| Time spent/consultation (minutes) | Chronic Care Management code | Reimbursement* | No. of billable events | Potential revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 | 99490 | $43 | 14 | $602 |
| 60 | 99497 | $94 | 12 | $1128 |
| 90 | 99487 + 99489 | $141 | 16 | $2256 |
*Reimbursement amounts based on Iowa Medicare billing in 2017