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Evolving Patient Care: The Pharmacists’ Role. Jessica Haskins-Cummings, PharmD Pharmacy Manager, Walgreens. Objectives. Describe current trends in the pharmacy profession Explain the development of pharmacists and their evolving role in a multi-disciplinary patient care team
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Evolving Patient Care: The Pharmacists’ Role Jessica Haskins-Cummings, PharmD Pharmacy Manager, Walgreens
Objectives Describe current trends in the pharmacy profession Explain the development of pharmacists and their evolving role in a multi-disciplinary patient care team Describe community pharmacy consultations and what pharmacists are discussing with your patients Discuss new medications and regulations
Pharmacy Future More multidisciplinary team approach to patient care Reimbursement based on outcomes and readmission rates Clinical services outside of traditional pharmacy practice Personalize and optimize therapy
Path to PharmD • All PharmD graduates now • Basics still there: medicinal chemistry, pharmacokinetics, pharmaceutics, pharmacodynamics • 2 years pre-pharm, 4 years pharmacy school • Residency and fellowships are more common • Multidisciplinary professional development throughout school (longitudinal assessment) • AACP and ACPE accreditation standards • Extern-type rotations throughout school • More direct patient contact • More interaction with different facets of the healthcare system
Path to PharmD Graduates expect more from the workplace in clinical, retail, hospital, and specialty pharmacy • Private consultation/ immunization rooms • Clinical decision making in rounds • Clinical services: • health testing • Medication Therapy Management • immunizations • specialty drug therapy
More involvement in patient care • Bedside consultations before discharge • Reassurance and integrating new therapy to current lifestyle • Retail ‘window’ consults • Balance of optimal therapy, lifestyle changes, insurance limitations, and customer service • Comprehensive Medication Therapy Management (MTM, ‘brown bag’ consult) • Thorough sit-down therapy optimization
Adherence • $100 billion per year in hospital admissions due to poor medication adherence. • Percentage of patients with chronic illness that DO NOT take medications as prescribed: 40-50% • 22% take less than the amount prescribed • 2/3 do not take any of their medication, but fill them • 12% do not even fill their prescriptions
Disease state specific counseling • Diabetes Mellitus: • Severe hyperglycemia with insulin resistance, ketoacidosis • Increased risk for gum disease and tooth decay • Blood disorders: Leukemia, sickle-cell anemia • Increased risk of gingivitis • Immunocompromised patients: Sjorgen’s syndrome, viral infections • Increased risk for oral disease • Pulmonary conditions: TB, purulent infections, tonsillitis, rhinitis • Increased risk for halitosis • Renal or hepatic failure • Increased risk for gum disease and tooth decay
Pre-op Regimen Oral Antithrombotics Anticoagulants Coumadin, Jantoven (warfarin) Eliquis (apixaban) Pradaxa (dabigatran) Xarelto (rivaroxaban) Antiplatelets Aspirin Effient (prasugrel) Brilanta (ticagrelor) Plavix (clopidogrel) Antibiotic prophylaxis • Controversial in recommendations • Case-by-case situations • Pharmacist role • Proper timing of therapy • Side effects and how to minimize • Monitoring for interactions and allergic reaction history
Surgery Meds • Anesthesia/ Sedation • Anti-anxiety • Anti-inflammatories • Pain relievers • Mepergan Fortis: no longer available • FDA & DEA request to have hydrocodone reclassified to a scheduled 2 controlled substance
Maintenance Products • Muscle relaxers & anti-inflammatories • Rx Only fluoride supplements • >1500 ppm total fluorine • OTC prevention: • Stannous fluoride: inhibits bacterial growth • Triclosan: inhibits prostaglandins • Artificial saliva products (Salivart)
Meds that affect oral health • Chemotherapeutics, immune modulators, head / neck radiation therapy • Oral mucosal symptoms delayed after therapy • Preventative therapy warranted: chlorhexadine rinse, sucralfate suspension, allopurinol mouthwash, strict adherence to oral care regimen • Amifostine (Ethyol) concomitant therapy – scavenger of free radicals • Oral pilocarpine – stimulates salivary secretions
Meds that affect oral health • Anticholinergics • oxybutinin, diphenhydramine, dicyclomine, atropine • Antidepressants • amitriptyline, doxepin, desipramine • Diuretics • hctz, furosemide • Stimulants • pseudoephedrine • Antipsychotics • chlorpromazine, thioridizine, clozapine Decreased saliva flow Increased risk for gingivitis & halitosis Typically dose related
Meds that affect oral health • Procardia, Nifedical(nifedipine) • Overgrowth of gums onto teeth • Sandimmune (cyclosporine) • Swollen, painful, red gums • Dilantin (phenytoin) • Swelling, bleeding of gums • Inhaled corticosteroids (Advair, Qvar, Flovent) • Increased risk for thrush • Bisphosphonates • Osteonecrosis (IV 94% vs oral 6%)
OTC medications – what are your patients finding at their drugstore? • Fluoride products • Topical anesthetics • Peroxide & pain-relief washes • Dry mouth products • Nightguard • Filling repair kits • Whiteners • Floss • Sensitivity products • Denture products • Dental wax
New Developments in medicine • Myrbetriq: overactive bladder • Sores, ulcers, or white spots in the mouth or on the lips • Dry mouth • TudorzaPressair: bronchodilator • Dry mouth • Fruit-like breath odor • Zetonna: allergic rhinitis • White patches inside nose or throat
Multidisciplinary approachto patient care Improve adherence Improve outcomes Improve quality of life
jessica.haskins@walgreens.com Thank you!!!