Archive for February, 2010

Do you know JCPP?

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Recently, I participated in the quarterly meeting of the Joint Commission of Pharmacy Practitioners (JCPP), where the “Ns” and the “As” of pharmacy convene to discuss professionwide issues.  These groups are dedicated, and more importantly, united in a shared vision where pharmacists take responsibility for patient outcomes.

At our meeting, we struggled with many issues, including the state of ambiguity surrounding health care reform and the business model reforms needed if we want continued development of pharmacists’ services. While each organization has a focus on its own members’ needs, it is gratifying to see all of organized pharmacy unified around this primary vision for the future of pharmacy practice.

I don’t often talk to practicing pharmacists who know much about JCPP. That’s too bad. If you’d like more background on this important part of our profession, let us know.  We’ll give the topic some “ink”—or at least a few electrons!

A note to Allison: Great work on health care reform!

Friday, February 12th, 2010

(The below e-mail message was sent to Allison Wiley, one of our dedicated Government Affairs staffers, by Julie Stading of Creighton University. Following that is a message I sent to Dr. Stading after Kristina Lunner, our VP of Government Affairs, told me about this great feedback.)

Allison,

I wanted to send a personal e-mail to encourage you to continue with your efforts. It was not until this current situation with health care reform that I realized that APhA is really the main pharmacy organization that is taking consistent action to push for pharmacy as a part of the health care reform. The other organizations that I belong to talk about it, but APhA is taking action… regularly. Again, thank you for all your efforts… it is noticed!

Julie

My response:

Hi Julie,

Thanks for your kind note to Allison Wiley regarding APhA’s advocacy. If you’ll indulge me, I’d like to share a story.

I first became involved with APhA as a student, although in those early, formative days of Student APhA, I really didn’t make the connection between our school’s chapter and anything “big picture.” After I graduated, like many of my peers I got immersed in life, building a family, and launching a practice. I wasn’t really involved in any organizations, until Frank McClendon invited me to a local association meeting and Harvey Barton, another Huntington, WV, pharmacist, started talking with us about our myriad opportunities. The three of us are still friends and business partners in a home infusion and specialty practice we own in Huntington. From the local association, I got involved in the state association, and in 1984, my first interface with APhA “national,” I was invited to make presentations on home infusion practice. In 1986, I was offered a job at APhA, which I accepted. Joe McGlothlin joined me as a partner in my Medicine Shoppe, and I moved my family to Washington for my first first day on the job with APhA 23 years ago on February 2, 1987.

What struck me about APhA back then was that they (now “we”) were for things, rather than against things. I first saw the organization through the eyes of Steve Crawford, a West Virginian, former APhA President, and practice innovator, and Tim Covington, a West Virginia University faculty member at the time and an innovator in community pharmacy residencies. From my vantage point, they and APhA in general always seemed to be looking forward, reaching for something better, working hard to learn from their leaders, and sharing those learnings with their members. As a young staffer back then, my initial impressions were validated, first by Jack Schlegel, the APhA CEO who hired me, and then during the ensuing 20 Gans years. I’ve been privileged to learn from these two, as well as from hundreds of others whom I’ve met over the years who share our passion for innovation and lifelong learning.

My tenure as exec is dedicated to making a difference and providing opportunities for pharmacists to contribute to excellent patient care by practicing as they’ve been trained. We do that, because that’s what we hear from our members that they want. We continue to be for things, whether in our work on Capitol Hill to advance our agenda, or with CMS or managed care, where we’re trying to maintain the MTM momentum.

In just 4 weeks, when 7,000 folks convene in Washington for our Annual Meeting, I’ll spend 18 hours each day talking with really energized and positive practitioners and students who are excited about our profession. That exercise should be exhausting, yet I’m always pumped and filled with new ideas at meetings’ end. I just wish more pharmacists took advantage of the opportunity.

I doubt you realize how important your encouragement is to staffers who work on pharmacy’s behalf. Thanks again for taking the time to do so.

Best regards,

Tom

DC’s imperfect storm!

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

We’re in the midst of an imperfect storm!

Over the past few days, Washington has been hammered with 28+ inches of snow. And we’re expecting another 10-22 inches tonight. That will make the winter of 2010 the snowiest on record for the nation’s capital. The snow coming tonight is the product of two low fronts–one from the southwest and one from the northeast. The Metro has been shut down at times, the federal government is closed, and just about everything else has stopped as well.

The same descriptor–Imperfect Storm–could be applied to the Cornhusker Kickback, the Louisiana Purchase, and the election in Massachusetts, events that produced the current paralysis over health care reform. Today’s headlines suggest that President Obama’s interest in convening a health care summit later this month may go nowhere as Republicans jockey for compromise and Democrats hold their ground.

In terms of educating Members of Congress, we’ve made a lot of headway despite the storms over health care reform of the past year. As we go forward, we’ll do our best to maintain this momentum, despite this Imperfect Storm!

Pharmacy education: An update from APhA

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

Luckily, our Board of Trustees met at APhA headquarters in Washington the last weekend of January, not this snow-stricken first one of February. Among the progress made by our Trustees was a review of the current status of pharmacy education.

During our meeting, we were briefed by representatives from the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education (ACPE) on the state of the rapidly changing world of education. New schools, rising standards, IPPEs (introductory pharmacy practice experiences) and simulation, and the enhanced continuing professional education credit criterion were all topics of discussion. We also reviewed the evolving concept of Continuing Professional Development, or CPD. You’ll be hearing more about all of these topics in coming months and years.

We are fortunate to have ACPE working to ensure that our country’s pharmacists and future pharmacists maintain the highest educational standards. ACPE is an incredible organizations run by dedicated individuals. Sometimes their rules may seem inflexible or illogical. When that occurs, constructive public debate follows and the process gets better. Ultimately, our patients benefit. Here’s a tip of the hat to a group of dedicated folks at ACPE.

Our staff members at APhA are also working hard to assimilate new rules, criteria, and standards to ensure that we maintain the excellent pharmacists our educational efforts are expected to produce, as measured by the new standards of education and outcomes measurement. Come see what I mean at APhA2010, coming up in Washington from March 12 to 15. And don’t worry–the snow will be gone by then!

In a few days, I’ll be presenting at the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy (AACP) Interim Meeting 2010. Those attending this meeting are the folks most intently focused on ongoing improvement in our education of pharmacists. It will be a privilege to visit with them and to learn about their innovations intended to better our profession and patient care. This group is especially creative, so I expect to receive information I can use on Capitol Hill to make our case for pharmacists’ services.

We have a winner: JMOB

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

A few weeks ago I put the challenge out for pharmacists to describe what you do as if you were trying to be clear to an eighth grader. We got a number of great responses, including this one that our staff committee of pharmacists and nonpharmacists picked as their favorite:

“Pharmacists help people get well, stay healthy, feel better, and save money. We help people safely use vaccines that prevent infections, medicines that cure diseases or prevent them from getting worse, and vitamins, supplements, or special foods to improve health and wellness. But most importantly, we’re near your home, easy to talk to, good at answering questions, and care about you and your family.”

The winner, JMOB, will receive a copy of The Practitioner’s Quick Reference to Nonprescription Drugs, by Cindy Knapp Dlugosz.

The Practitioner’s Quick Reference to Nonprescription Drugs contains information from the American Pharmacists Association’s comprehensive Handbook of Nonprescription Drugs: An Interactive Approach to Self-Care, 16th edition. The information has been edited and formatted to include only the content that practitioners are most likely to need during self-care consultations with patients. The book covers 25 common self-treatable conditions including acne, common cold, cough, fever, and headache. The Practitioner’s Quick Reference to Nonprescription Drugs is a must-have resource for busy health practitioners!

Thanks to everyone who submitted their job descriptions!

Jimmy Mitchell, APhA’s Honorary President and servant leader

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010
Jimmy Mitchell Addresses the APhA Board
Jimmy Mitchell Addresses the APhA Board

One of the very great things about this job is that I get to interact with really wonderful people.

This weekend our Board of Trustees had the privilege to spend time with our Honorary President, Jimmy Mitchell, Director of the Health Resources Services Administration Office of Pharmacy Affairs. In his well-known Mississippi accent, he briefed us on his vision and lifetime of service to the medically underserved.

What was remarkable about the presentation was the obvious affinity and devotion he brings to his work, which in simple terms is to ensure that the medically underserved get the best possible pharmacy services available in America. At one point in his presentation the Board and staff gave him a standing ovation in recognition of his lifetime of leadership. We all have a lot to learn from him, and we will continue to draw from his wisdom long after he completes his term as our Honorary President.

Thanks to Pharmacist Mitchell’s work, thousands of pharmacies now have relationships with community health centers to meet the needs of this population. We’re grateful to him for that.

French-speaking pharmacists for Haiti: APhA responds

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

The US Department of State’s Emergency Plan for AIDS recently contacted APhA about its need for French-speaking pharmacists in Haiti. Help was needed in managing French-labeled antiretroviral medications in Port-au-Prince.

A facility where medications were stored withstood the January 12 earthquake. It has been repurposed to serve as a medication-distribution point for earthquake-relief efforts. The medications are being distributed through the existing structure for serving AIDS clinics.

The public is flocking to those clinics for help since they know medical care is available there. Staff members in the clinics are working to arrange food and shelter for volunteers, possibly in tent cities with other medical personnel.

What is amazing is that thanks to earlier pleas, we were able to pull from our database of hundreds of pharmacists who volunteered a list of 19 French- and Creole-speaking pharmacists ready to go to Haiti for stints of 2 weeks or longer. For updates on pharmacists’ involvement in Haiti, see the homepage of www.pharmacist.com.

Thanks for stepping up. Your profession is proud of you!