1 / 15

2.11 Conduct Medication Management

2.11 Conduct Medication Management. University Medical Center Health System Lubbock, TX Jason Mills, PharmD , RPh Assistant Director of Pharmacy. Project Options.

dcade
Download Presentation

2.11 Conduct Medication Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2.11 Conduct Medication Management University Medical Center Health System Lubbock, TX Jason Mills, PharmD, RPh Assistant Director of Pharmacy

  2. Project Options • 2.11.2 Evidence-base interventions that put in place the teams, technology and processes to avoid medication errors. This project option could include one or more of the following components: • a) Implement a medication management program that serves the patient across the continuum of care targeting one or more chronic disease patient populations • b) Implement Computerized Physician Order Entry (CPOE) • c) Implement pharmacist-led chronic disease medication management services in collaboration with primary care and other health care providers • d) Conduct quality improvement for project using methods such as rapid cycle improvement.

  3. Rationale • Approximately 1.5 million preventable ADEs occur annually as a result of medication errors • Cost more than 3 billion per year • 1 in 5 patients discharged from hospitals suffers an adverse event • 72% are related to medications • 76% of Medicare readmissions in 2007 were potentially preventable • 13-15 billion in readmission costs may be preventable • Pharmacist-provided medication therapy review and consultation in various settings resulted in reductions in physician visits, ER visits, hospital days, and overall health care costs • Uniquely positioned to help increase medication safety and compliance in patients across the continuum of care

  4. Rationale • Diabetes is a complex, increasingly common chronic condition that remains one of the most serious health problems in Lubbock County and Texas • 6th leading cause of death in Texas • 21.9% of adult diabetics do not have health insurance in Texas • Lubbock BRFSS data indicate that 10.7% have diagnosed diabetes • Death rate from diabetes in Lubbock is 38.6/100,000 compared to 26.5/100,000 in Texas • Approximately 1.8 million adult Texans have type 2 diabetes and 460,000 are undiagnosed • 4th leading cause of death for African Americans and Hispanics • One study found that a decrease in diabetes medication adherence resulted in a 58% increase in hospitalizations and 81% increase in all-cause mortality

  5. Project Description • Provide medication management for adult diabetes mellitus patients across the continuum of care • Age 18 and older • Approximately 5000 total patient visits per year with about 1000 visits being Medicaid or uninsured • Establish a patient-centric medication management program that includes the following components: • Written medication management plan focused on medication safety • Clearly defined roles for interdisciplinary participants • Process and criteria to screen for adult diabetic patients • Standardized medication reconciliation process and counseling by a pharmacist • Utilization of patient friendly education and medication management tools • Patient access to outpatient prescriptions on site at UMC Outpatient Pharmacy • Targeted post-discharge follow-up

  6. Project Process • Population-based screening • Identify targeted adult diabetic population • Admission assessment • Best Possible Medication History (BPMH) • Compliance • Lack of efficacy • Adverse drug effects • Discharge counseling • Comprehensive review of discharge medication list and counseling by a pharmacist • Individualized patient education • Comprehension of medication instructions and therapy plan • Coordinate the filling and delivery of discharge prescriptions to the patient’s room • Post-discharge Follow-up • Phone call by a pharmacist • Assess compliance, identify ADEs, and answering any patient questions

  7. Project Goals • Project Goals • Reduce medication errors and adverse drug events • Increase adherence to an appropriate medication regimen • Cost saving to the health system • Provide access to outpatient medications • Decrease unplanned visits to the ER • Decrease hospital’s diabetes 30 day readmission rate (IT-3.3) • Improve patient satisfaction regarding issues and questions about their medications • Regional Goals • Improve access to care and medications • Address the high incidence of diabetes mellitus • Provide a specialist to assist in the treatment of diabetes mellitus

  8. Expected Outcomes • DY2 (10/1/12 – 9/30/13) • Develop criteria and identify targeted patient populations • Develop written medication management plan • Implement an evidence based program based on best practices for medication reconciliation to improve medication management and continuity between acute care and ambulatory setting • DY3 (10/1/13 – 9/30/14) • 20% or about 1000 patients receive medication management therapy • DY4 (10/1/14 – 9/30/15) • 40% or about 2000 patients receive medication management therapy • DY5 (10/1/15 – 9/30/16) • 60% or about 3000 patients receive medication management therapy

  9. Challenges • Complex disease state and co-morbidites • Engagement and education of patients • History of poor medication compliance • Lack of understanding of the severity of their disease state • Collaboration with other services and departments • Case Management • Social Services • Nursing • Physicians • Pharmacist education and training • Pharmacist staffing • Hospital census

  10. CQI • Pharmacy medication management team meets internally at least every two weeks • Lessons learned • Project impacts • Challenges • Pharmacy medication management team meets with IT monthly to discuss issues and improvements • Pharmacy medication management team meets routinely with case management, social services, and nursing • Medication errors, ADEs, and compliance are continuously monitored for trends and areas of improvement

  11. June 1, 2013- March 22, 2014

  12. October 1, 2013-March 22, 2014

  13. Readmissions

More Related