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Why Are We Here?. John Lowe Associate Chief Consultant PBM. Objectives. Discuss findings of internal and external reviews Review VA’s response and action plan to reviews Provide training to staff and supervisors on the front line Establish network of co-workers.
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Why Are We Here? John Lowe Associate Chief Consultant PBM
Objectives • Discuss findings of internal and external reviews • Review VA’s response and action plan to reviews • Provide training to staff and supervisors on the front line • Establish network of co-workers
Internal and External Reviews • Office of Inspector General Combined Assessment Program (OIG CAP) • Government Accountability Office (GAO) • Joint Commission (JC) • System-wide Ongoing Assessment & Review Strategy (SOARS) • Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA)
Reviews of Pharmacy Inventory • OIG Audit of Pharmacy Inventory 2000 • OIG Audit OF VA CMOP Inventory Management 2002 • GAO Review of Pharmacy Inventory 2004 • OIG Audit of VA CMOP Inventory Accountability 2009 • OIG Audit of VHA’s Management of Non-Controlled Drugs 2009
OIG Audit of Pharmacy Inventory 2000 • Findings (from sample of 4 facilities): • Inventories reduced compared to previous system under supply depot system • Inventories at all 4 centers exceeded 10 day supply • None of the facilities had determined stock levels or reorder points based on use • None of the facilities conducted physical inventories • End of year purchases contributed to excess stock
OIG Audit of Pharmacy Inventory 2000 • Recommendations • VHA issue guidance for inventory reduction • VHA monitor progress in reducing inventories • Provide staff training for inventory management • Discourage using end of year funds for large purchases of stock
OIG Audit of VA CMOP Inventory Management 2002 • Findings • Supply on hand exceeded benchmarks for 59.9% of items in inventory • CMOP did not effectively monitor stock levels or management item demand • Maintained “cushions” of excess stock • Inventory included items with little or no demand • Estimated $28.8 million in excess inventory
OIG Audit of VA CMOP Inventory Management 2002 • Recommendations • Require CMOPs to eliminate excess inventory and use automated information to manage inventory • Improve CMOP automated inventory management and control reports • Develop minimum demand for adding new items • Train CMOP staff on inventory management techniques and use of automation
OIG Audit of VA CMOP Inventory Management 2002 • Recommendations • Ensure CMOPs implement internal controls and security requirements for controlled substances • Monitor CMOP progress in reducing inventories and improving inventory control
GAO Review of Pharmacy Inventory 2004 • Focused on drugs for return • Findings (6 medical centers): • 5 of 6 did not inventory drugs for return • No analytical review of credits • Returned drugs stored in unsecured open bins in 4 of 6 facilities • VA uses an honor system, relying on contractors • VA not aware of company requirements regarding returns (exp dates, etc) • Pharmacy staff claimed not cost effective to monitor (without data to support claim)
GAO Review of Pharmacy Inventory 2004 • VA Response to GAO • Facilities will maintain a list of drugs held for credit (VISTA Patch PSA*3*51) • Non-controlled drugs for return will be secured • Facilities will periodically test to see if credits received is correct • Network PBM will monitor facility returns • Data will be analyzed for trends • National directive will be published
OIG Audit of VA CMOP Inventory Accountability 2009 • Findings: • Inadequate wall to wall inventories • Inadequate tracking of dispensing by software • Significant differences between actual and projected on hand inventory • Inadequate control of inventory balance adjustments • Lack of control for drugs held for return • Inadequate separation of duties over critical system functions • Inadequate Econolink system access controls (everyone used same password)
OIG Audit of VA CMOP Inventory Accountability 2009 • VHA Response • Wall to wall inventories completed quarterly • Each CMOP Director certified compliance with policy for returned drugs • Developed a statement of work to rewrite software to ensure complete tracking of inventory • Developed management policy to review inventory adjustments monthly • Established procedures to restrict one person from ordering, receiving and adjusting inventory • Generic password for Econolink was disabled
OIG Audit of VHA Management of Non-Controlled Drugs 2009 • Findings (Review of 31 facilities): • Drug dispensing not accurately and consistently recorded (transfer and returns to stock) • State home dispensing • Automatic replenishment/ward stock • Label reprint function used inappropriately to dispense drugs • Drugs returned to stock not accurately captured • Lack of policy to monitor high risk non-controlled drugs • Wall to wall inventory data not used to improve accountability
OIG Audit of VHA Management of Non-Controlled Drugs 2009 • VHA Response • VHA will identify high risk drugs to monitor • PBM will re-emphasize the importance of tracking all dispensing activity and survey results • PBM will remind staff that drugs that leave pharmacy cannot be returned to stock • Inventory balances must be adjusted for drugs that don’t leave pharmacy and are returned to stock • Access to label reprint will be limited • PBM will develop standardized electronic formats for inventory and hold managers accountable for accuracy
SOARS Program • Provide assessment and educational consultation to VA facilities • Support a continuous readiness culture • Help provide quality health services • Assist medical centers with meeting standards of care • Identify and share strong practices
SOARS Program • Site visit to each facility every 3 years • ~250 trained SOARS consultants • Training films completed for SPD, Mental Health and Pharmacy • Strong focus on pharmacy and medication management
SOARS Trends ReportInventory Related Findings • Based on 136 reviews • Identification, management and security of high cost, look alike-sound alike, high risk and other sensitive drugs (40 sites, 29%) • Pre-labeling, accurate labeling, segregation and security of drugs throughout organization (63 sites, 45%) • Management of controlled substance inventories (13 sites, 9%)
In Summary • Inventory management opportunities cited in numerous internal and external reviews • Reviews identified a lack of training for staff involved in inventory management and drug accountability • Need to improve management of dollars involved in inventory as a tax payer funded organization • Reduce opportunity for theft and diversion • Improve services to veterans
Welcome! PBM Drug Accountability Conference