A lighter moment in preparation for APhA2012

February 27th, 2012
PSSC Intern Thu Trong builds a racetrack

This “race track” is in its infancy as it is being built by Thu Truong, an intern from the University of Houston College of Pharmacy with the Pharmacy Services Support Center (PSSC). She and the rest of the crew will have the track and cars ready for you to drive by game time in New Orleans at the 2012 APhA Annual Meeting & Exposition. Be sure to stop by PSSC booth #111.

Describing the value of pharmacists’ services

February 21st, 2012

Today I came across a very well-written blog post that I’d like to share with you. It describes the value of pharmacists’ services.

APhA–APPM launches three Special Interest Groups

January 25th, 2012

The APhA Academy of Pharmacy Practice and Management (APhA–APPM) has officially launched Special Interest Groups (SIGs) for Medication Management, Nuclear Pharmacy, and Preceptors as the move to transition to the new Academy structure continues.

Members can opt in to any of these SIGs for networking opportunities and work on potential projects. Several other SIGs are in various stages of development.

Pharmacist petition on provider status

January 23rd, 2012

As many of you are aware, El Rio pharmacist Sandra Leal, an APhA member and newly recognized APhA Fellow, is circulating a petition through the Change.org website advocating for recognition of pharmacists as health care providers.

To date, Leal has gathered more than 15,000 signatures from physicians, patients, pharmacists, and a senator from Kentucky. Her grassroots effort was profiled on January 15 in the Arizona Daily Star newspaper.

Leal works in a community health center that is a recognized medical home and has been having challenges integrating into the medical home model because the lack of provider status causes payment challenges in her work setting.

APhA has been in frequent contact with Leal to get updates from her, and we facilitated a conference call she had with a CMS representative. We have been supportive of her efforts to raise awareness about pharmacists and lack of provider status by promoting them in our electronic communication vehicles.

We’ll continue to update you as this initiative progresses.

Surgeon General supports USPHS report on pharmacists as providers

January 21st, 2012

The U.S. Public Health Service (USPHS) recently released a landmark report identifying a “rationale and compelling discussion to support health reform through pharmacists delivering expanded patient care services.”

In an exciting development for the pharmacy profession, U.S. Surgeon General Regina Benjamin, MD, MBA, released a letter publicly supporting the report. It is notable that a high-ranking government official would get behind a report that advocates pharmacists as health care providers.

The USPHS report is already generating a buzz within the profession, and APhA will be using the report in our advocacy and practice development work. The report and the letter from the Surgeon General are available on pharmacist.com.

The report, “Improving Patient and Health System Outcomes through Advanced Pharmacy Practice: A Report to the Surgeon General 2011,” was coauthored by several USPHS pharmacists and led by U.S. Assistant Surgeon General Scott Giberson.

APhA Board of Trustees member and student pharmacist Sara McElroy is currently on rotation with RADM Giberson and was instrumental in developing communication strategies for the report and interfacing with APhA so that we were ready with a public statement and news article as soon as the report was made public.

2012: A time to unite and prove our mettle

December 31st, 2011

The following thoughts will be published as my January 2012 editorial in Pharmacy Today.

We all know about the fight-or-flight response from pharmacology class. When threatened, though, the turtle exhibits a third response—retreating into its shell and waiting for the world to get better on its own. The ostrich, head in sand, provides another passive option for dealing with problems.

As pharmacists move into the pivotal election year of 2012, we have much to feel threatened by. Whether health care reform survives the Supreme Court and the presidential election, the inexorable wheels of change will continue turning in our professional world. As they do, we have a number of responses we can take, some more effective than others.

We can disengage from the conversation surrounding changes in health care, retreat to our caves, and hope the storms will pass, or just go through our daily motions as if nothing is happening. But what will those options achieve? As one of the mice in Who Moved My Cheese said, “I guess we resist changing because we’re afraid of change.” That’s true, but do we want to be sitting around in a few years talking about Old Cheese, or feasting on the New Cheese we’ve found?

APhA members are laser focused on finding and, when needed, fighting for the New Cheese. We see opportunity in change. We work together well, and we are capable of leading from where we stand. I’m proud of members like Sandra Leal, a Tuscon, AZ, pharmacist we featured in last month’s mini-profile in Today’s Pharmacists in Action section. She singlehandedly launched a change.org petition asking for the federal government to recognize the knowledge and capabilities of the nation’s third-largest profession by making pharmacists eligible to bill for clinical services provided to Medicare patients. Just 5 weeks later, she had nearly 13,000 signatories to her petition, including pharmacists, physicians, other health professionals, and patients. That’s the kind of response to change that characterizes APhA members. That’s leading from where you stand.

Leal’s zeal for change won’t take root without strong advocacy from organized pharmacy. We need your strength and your numbers to succeed as your advocates! The largest association of pharmacists in the world, APhA has grown well above 60,000 and our average member’s age is younger. We need your support now—that of people who care about pharmacy and want to make a difference in years to come. When we talk to Congress about provider status, we need stories and we need numbers. It will be a fight, but it’s a fight we can win if pharmacists across America are willing to support the effort. Whatever other New Year’s resolutions you’re working on this year, please add this one to your list: I will support my profession by joining and getting involved in APhA, my state association, and another pharmacy group that supports my practice setting.

In turn, and along with the incredible APhA staff team, we promise that we will make the most of APhA members’ time, money, and energy as we fight for a better world for pharmacists.

Merry Christmas, Happy Hanukkah, and Season’s Greetings

December 23rd, 2011

This is a busy time for pharmacy, especially for those in community practice who will barely have time to catch a breath as patients rush to get their year-end meds. Yet we all typically find a few minutes to breathe and reflect.

As we look back on the past year and anticipate the next, I “zoom in” to recalling the many conversations, e-mails, and letters this past year from individuals in all walks of pharmacy who have expressed the full range of emotions about our profession. As we “zoom out” to look at the macro view, we see huge challenges in the economy and old business model for pharmacy, while also witnessing major positive changes in the attitudes of policymakers and those in our colleague professions. And we see pharmacy systems and business changes that bode well for pharmacists and the patients we serve, if we can step up when the opportunities arise. Payers will increasingly turn to pharmacists to help them meet quality goals, and pharmacy employers are really gearing up with new technology, services, training, store configurations, and systems to make the conversion from buy low, sell high to the provision of enhanced patient care.

Yes, we’ve got a long way to go, and that’s where the frustration arises, at all levels. But in this season of thanks, hope, and new beginnings, I look forward to learning from you as we continue our path of advocacy and innovation. We will continue to highlight exemplary practices in our publications and meetings, and we’ll be driving for changes that empower you to provide the kind of care Americans deserve. We must succeed! Our patients are waiting.

On behalf of the staff and volunteer leadership at APhA, I hope you and your families enjoy a healthy, happy and prosperous New Year!

Pharmacy is at the table

December 16th, 2011

Today I participated in an invitational roundtable discussion on clinical leadership in health care reform at the Brookings Institution, a leading think tank in Washington, DC. The other invitees were primarily physicians from 12 leading physician organizations, as well as nurse practitioners and nurses.

I shared with the group that, while the number of pharmacists in the US is only about one-quarter that of physicians and about one-tenth that of nurses, most Americans are in a pharmacy several times a month and have ready access to us. While we are in an uncomfortable place between building service offerings (medication therapy management) and finding payment for those services, we have a medication use crisis and there are very few incentives to fix that crisis, despite pharmacists being readily accessible and well trained. Also, we typically make a significant number of referrals to our medical colleagues in the course of our practice.

I further shared that I’ve been encouraging pharmacists to “walk across the street” and talk with physician colleagues about their approach to accountable care organizations and medical homes or medical neighborhoods. We should consider organizing joint listening sessions to learn more, and then to discuss in an interdisciplinary way the best approaches to integrated care delivery. It will only change if it changes at the practice level. I also shared that we have a growing workforce, well trained to integrate with physicians in medication management, but that we need help and cooperation among our physician colleagues to build the business models.

We MUST agree on principles for collaborative practice if we are going to avoid the typical turf wars that occur in state houses around the country when one discipline or another wants to change a practice act. And we must create incentives for all. I shared that incentives are not just about driving selfish action, but are primarily about a system describing through incentives the behaviors and outcomes desired.

I shared, too, how the lack of provider status was not only hurting our profession, but also the medical profession and health care in general. If we pursue it, we will face a major war absent up-front agreement in principle, but all have much to gain, as many of the services we provide will likely be done through physician practices and will lead to gains in improved patient care.

We had a chance to discuss each of these points, and I felt there was agreement that all of these topics were worth continued dialogue. I did not hear any disagreement. While there’s no cause for celebration just yet, I think it’s fair to say that pharmacy is at the table.

Thought you’d like to know.

Iraq War ends

December 15th, 2011

Today marked the final stage in the 9-year war in Iraq. Soon all of our soldiers will be home. I’d like to take a moment to once again thank them for their service, and also thank those uniformed pharmacists who support them in so many ways. My visits to our military hospitals and their pharmacies have impressed me with the commitment we are so blessed to have from these outstanding professionals. Let’s pray that this new beginning for the Iraqi people is highly successful, and thank those who gave so much for their sacrifice in helping the Iraqis achieve the opportunity for freedom.

 

Petition seeks recognition of pharmacists as providers under Medicare

December 13th, 2011

APhA member Sandra Leal—a true patient care rock star—has organized a petition on Change.org to raise awareness that pharmacists need to be recognized as health care providers under the Social Security Act to be paid by Medicare for their services.

According to our pharmacist.com news article, Leal believes people should sign the petition because now—while health care reform is being implemented—is a “critical time to assert ourselves as pharmacists.” So far, the impact of the petition has been to educate people that pharmacists do not actually have provider status. She hopes to reach 10,000 signatures, a realistic goal considering that more than 7,000 pharmacists, physicians, patients, and legislators have signed the petition since it started on November 15.

Leal told pharmacist.com that she will keep the petition open until she receives enough signatures to make a difference. Sign on in support!