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Accelerating Progress in Promoting Prescription Medicine Adherence: The Adherence Action Agenda

Join the Adherence Action Agenda presented by Ray Bullman at NCPIE to improve communication on medication use, empower patients for informed dialogue with clinicians, and ensure timely, accurate information delivery.

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Accelerating Progress in Promoting Prescription Medicine Adherence: The Adherence Action Agenda

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  1. Accelerating Progress in Promoting Prescription Medicine Adherence:The Adherence Action Agenda Presented by: Ray Bullman National Council on Patient Information and Education (NCPIE) American Society for Automation in Pharmacy Mid-Year Meeting Palm Beach, FL June 29, 2014

  2. Introduction to NCPIE Decades before patient safety, medication adherence, or patientempowerment became part of our lexicon, they informed the heart and soul of NCPIE’s mission: To stimulate and improve communication of information on the appropriate use of medicines to consumers and health care professionals.

  3. Since 1982, NCPIE has: Brought together public and private stakeholderswho are committed to improving communication about the safe, appropriate use of medicines; Empowered and engaged consumers, patients and caregivers so they can have informed dialogue with clinicians (and other trusted sources) about their medicines, to optimize outcomes; Created and implemented programsto ensure that medicine information is useful, timely, and scientifically accurate in whatever form – and for whichever audience – it is delivered.

  4. (Some) NCPIE Campaigns Serving as: • Catalyst • Convener • Collaborator

  5. NCPIE Focus on Adherence 2013  Accelerating Progress in Prescription Medicine Adherence: The Adherence Action Agenda - A National Action Plan to Address America’s “Other Drug Problem” (NCPIE A3 Report / October, 2013) 2007 Enhancing Prescription Medicine Adherence: A National Action Plan (NCPIE Report / 10 Recommendations for Action) 1995 Prescription Medicine Compliance: A Review of the Baseline of knowledge (NCPIE Report); Journal of Pharmacoepidemiology 1989 Children & America's Other Drug Problem: Guidelines for Improving Prescription Medicine Use Among Children and Teenagers (NCPIE Report) 1987 Priorities and Approaches for Improving Prescription Medicine Use By Older Americans (NCPIE Report)

  6. Adherence Action Agenda (A3 Project) click on link below to view A3 Project video http/www.youtube.com/w:/atch?feature=player_embedded&v=O6k5AA_JZOQ

  7. The A3 Project -- Spotlight on: • Chronic conditions & co-morbidities: where we know taking meds safely and appropriately will make a difference in outcomes; • Top dyads and triads for co-morbid chronic conditions. • Across the continuum perspective: adherence improvement for one chronic condition very different than for multiple chronic conditions; very different when multiple providers are involved.

  8. A3 Priorities for Action • Establish adherence as priority goal of federal and state efforts designed to reduce burden of multiple chronic conditions (MCCs). • Establish role of the patient navigator within the care team to help MCC patients navigate the system and take meds as prescribed. 3. Promote clinical management approachestailored to specific needs & circumstances of individuals with MCCs.

  9. A3 Priorities for Action • Incentivize healthcare system to incorporate adherence education & medication support as part of routine care for MCC patients. • Eliminate the barriers that impede the ability of patient with MCCs to refill their prescription medicines. 6. Reduce cost-sharing barriers for patients by lowering or eliminating patient copayments for Rx meds used to treat the most common chronic diseases.

  10. A3 Priorities for Action • Accelerate the adoption of new health information technologies that promote medication adherence. • Establish adherence as a measure for the accreditation of healthcare professional educational programs. • Address MCCs and optimal medication adherenceapproaches in treatment guidelines. 10. Stimulate rigorous research in treating MCC patients including focused research on medication adherence to promote safe / appropriate use of different medicines in this pt. population.

  11. Recent NCPIE A3 Activity • Working to: • incorporate medication management & adherence as required area of medical education and residency training. • Promote/advance appointment-based model (ABM) and medication synchronization. • Incorporate medication mgmt. & adherence for MCC patients as a core competency in federal clinical guidelines in development for undergraduate, post-grad education and continuous learning.

  12. Recent NCPIE A3 Activity • Established an Adherence Action Agenda “Partners” Page within American Heart Association’s Check. Change. Control. Leadership Community, the mission of which is to help 13.4 million more Americans take control of their high blood pressure by 2020. • Analyze adherence-related findings from national NCPIE surveys of consumers’ and HCPs’ attitudes, preferences & practices related to receipt, communication & use of medication risk & safety information. (Next slide)

  13. NCPIE Research: Communicating Medication Risk &Safety Information Support: FDA Collaborative Agreement. In year 2 of 3 year project. Completed: National surveys of 2,000 consumers and 800 healthcare professionals (200 each: pharmacists, nurse practitioners, physician assistants and primary care physicians) To assess: consumers’ and health care professionals’ knowledge, attitudes, preferences for receipt & use of medication risk and safety information. NCPIE wishes to acknowledge that this work was supported by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research under grant number 5U18FD004653. The content is solely the responsibility of NCPIE and does not necessarily represent the official views of the Food and Drug Administration.

  14. Communicating Medication Risk and Safety Information Research Phase Partners Center for Drug Safety and Effectiveness, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University Ipsos Healthcare Research Next Steps: Design, implement a national educational initiative.

  15. It’s BACK – and NOT BY POPULAR DEMAND Patient Medication Information Circa 1994/95 – Action Plan for the Provision of Useful Prescription Medicine (Keystone) 1995 – 2005: Action Plan in play. Two assessment targets for success: Distribution & Conformance with Action Plan criteria. 2007/08: FDA deems Action Plan efforts failed to meet assessment targets. Moves to alternative (likely regulatory approach).

  16. IT’S BACK – and NOT BY POPULAR DEMAND CMI (aka PMI) PATIENT MEDICATION INFORMATION 2010 – 2012 Brookings Institute & FDA Collaborative Agreement – conducted 3 public workshops to discuss optimizing, implementing, and evaluating adoption of a single standard medication information document. Science of Communicating Medication Information to Consumers (2010) Ensuring Access to Effective PMI (2010) Designing Pilot Programs to Distribute PMI (2011) JULY 1, 2014: Exploring the Promise of Patient Medication Information (9:00 AM – 12:30 PM) @ Brookings, Washington, DC Can register to watch via streaming video: brookings.edu – click “Events”

  17. IT’S BACK – and NOT BY POPULAR DEMAND CMI (aka PMI) PATIENT MEDICATION INFORMATION EVENT AGENDA TOPICS Lessons Learned from PMI Projects – Julie Aker, Concentrics Research, Michael Wolf, Northwestern Univ., Oluwamurewa Oguntimein, FDA, Ruth Day, Duke University, Paul Wilson, Adheris Health. Moving PMI Forward – Marc Boutin, National Health Council, Angela Patterson, CVS Caremark Minute Clinic, Ronna Hauser, National Community Pharmacists Association, Kevin Nicholson, National Association of Chain Drug Stores. Join the conversation: #PatientMedinfo For more information: events@brookings.edu

  18. Contact Information Ray Bullman Executive Vice President bullman@ncpie.info National Council on Patient Information and Education (NCPIE) Rockville, MD 20850 (301) 340-3940 – phone talkaboutrx.org; bemedicinesmart.org; bemedwise.org; mustforseniors.org; recoveryopensdoors.org

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