A technical assistance program approach for pharmacist clinical services integration in primary care organizations.

Autor: Smith MA, Mulrooney M, Shipley BL, Sobieraj DM
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Journal of the American Pharmacists Association : JAPhA [J Am Pharm Assoc (2003)] 2023 May-Jun; Vol. 63 (3), pp. 952-960. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Dec 23.
DOI: 10.1016/j.japh.2022.12.020
Abstrakt: Background: Little is known about the use of technical assistance (TA) programs to facilitate the integration of pharmacist clinical services in primary care settings.
Objective: Design, implement, and evaluate a TA program to advance pharmacist integration and clinical services in primary care.
Practice Description: Structured TA program for developing new or enhancing current integrated pharmacist services was utilized in 4 primary care organizations (i.e., federally qualified health center, accountable care organization, and an academic and regional health system).
Practice Innovation: Holistic TA program with a logic model, organizational stages of pharmacist integration, project prioritization, and implementation plans.
Evaluation Methods: A mixed-methods contextual inquiry approach for integration of pharmacist clinical services. Quantitative analysis was used for TA program activities, time spent, pilot project data, and a web-based survey for post-TA program assessment. Coincidence analysis was used to assess organizational commitment to TA services. Qualitative analysis was used for data collected through semi-structured key informant interviews and team meeting activity reports.
Results: TA program team spent 1872 hours over 11 months on program development, logistics, implementation, and project oversight. TA services included 88 onsite and virtual meetings, 11 onsite pharmacist coaching sessions, 6 workflow mapping sessions, and updating online learning resources. Primary care organizations that had already hired a pharmacist were more likely to uptake TA services. Most useful TA methods were webinar meetings (89%) and on-site pharmacist coaching (88%). TA project results were used for strategic planning (73%), pharmacist value/impact assessment (72%), pharmacist capacity modeling (68%), and workflow design (65%). A key learning from the TA program was the importance of a qualified pharmacist with clinical service experience in primary care settings and population health teams.
Conclusion: TA program for the pharmacist clinical service integration has broad application to primary care organizations with diverse organizational structures, payer mixes, and practice settings.
(Copyright © 2023 American Pharmacists Association®. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
Databáze: MEDLINE