Bridging the Gap: Collaboration between a School of Pharmacy, Public Health, and Governmental Organizations to provide Clinical and Economic Services to Medicare Beneficiaries

Objective: Promoting healthy communities through the provision of accessible quality healthcare services is a common mission shared by schools of pharmacy, public health departments, and governmental agencies. The following study seeks to identify and detail the benefits of collaboration between th...

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Main Authors: Rajul Patel, Mary Anne Choi, Dorothy Fan, Vincent Man, Cathy Thao, Thanh Thai, Michaela Vachuska, Milana Vachuska, Michael Xu, Cynthia S. Valle-Oseguera, Carly A. Ranson, Christopher Pham, Edward L Rogan, Mark P Walberg, joseph A Woelfel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing 2018-01-01
Series:INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/986
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spelling doaj-be85c6d9bf974ebdac0a8d2b7e7068e92020-11-24T23:03:38ZengUniversity of Minnesota Libraries PublishingINNOVATIONS in Pharmacy2155-04172018-01-019110.24926/iip.v9i1.986Bridging the Gap: Collaboration between a School of Pharmacy, Public Health, and Governmental Organizations to provide Clinical and Economic Services to Medicare BeneficiariesRajul Patel0Mary Anne Choi1Dorothy Fan2Vincent Man3Cathy Thao4Thanh Thai5Michaela Vachuska6Milana Vachuska7Michael Xu8Cynthia S. Valle-Oseguera9Carly A. Ranson10Christopher Pham11Edward L Rogan12Mark P Walberg13joseph A Woelfel14University of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the PacificUniversity of the Pacific Objective: Promoting healthy communities through the provision of accessible quality healthcare services is a common mission shared by schools of pharmacy, public health departments, and governmental agencies. The following study seeks to identify and detail the benefits of collaboration between these different groups. Methods: In total, 112 mobile clinics targeting Medicare beneficiaries were held in 20 cities across Northern/Central California from 2007 to 2016. Under the supervision of licensed pharmacists, trained student pharmacists provided vaccinations, health screenings, Medicare Part D plan optimization services, and Medication Therapy Management (MTM) to patients at each clinic site. Clinic support was extended by public health departments, governmental agency partners, and a health professional program. Results: Since clinic inception, 8,996 patients were provided services. In total, 19,441 health screenings and 3,643 vaccinations were collectively provided to clinic patients. We assisted 5,549 beneficiaries with their Part D benefit, resulting in an estimated aggregate out-of-pocket drug cost savings of $5.7 million. Comprehensive MTM services were provided to 4,717 patients during which 8,184 medication-related problem (MRP) were identified. In 15.3% of patients, the MRP was determined severe enough to warrant prescriber follow-up. In total, 42.9% of clinic patients were from racial/ethnic minority groups and 25.5% had incomes ≤150% of the Federal Poverty Level. Conclusion: Collaboration between a school of pharmacy, public health departments, and governmental organizations can effectively serve Medicare beneficiary populations and result in: 1) lower out-of-pocket drug costs, 2) minimization of medication-related problems, 3) increased vaccination uptake, and 4) increased utilization of health screenings. Conflict of Interest We declare no conflicts of interest or financial interests that the authors or members of their immediate families have in any product or service discussed in the manuscript, including grants (pending or received), employment, gifts, stock holdings or options, honoraria, consultancies, expert testimony, patents and royalties. Treatment of Human Subjects: IRB review/approval required and obtained   Type: Original Research https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/986MedicareCollaborationInterprofessional eductionPublic HealthMedication Therapy ManagementHealth Screenings/Vaccinations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rajul Patel
Mary Anne Choi
Dorothy Fan
Vincent Man
Cathy Thao
Thanh Thai
Michaela Vachuska
Milana Vachuska
Michael Xu
Cynthia S. Valle-Oseguera
Carly A. Ranson
Christopher Pham
Edward L Rogan
Mark P Walberg
joseph A Woelfel
spellingShingle Rajul Patel
Mary Anne Choi
Dorothy Fan
Vincent Man
Cathy Thao
Thanh Thai
Michaela Vachuska
Milana Vachuska
Michael Xu
Cynthia S. Valle-Oseguera
Carly A. Ranson
Christopher Pham
Edward L Rogan
Mark P Walberg
joseph A Woelfel
Bridging the Gap: Collaboration between a School of Pharmacy, Public Health, and Governmental Organizations to provide Clinical and Economic Services to Medicare Beneficiaries
INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
Medicare
Collaboration
Interprofessional eduction
Public Health
Medication Therapy Management
Health Screenings/Vaccinations
author_facet Rajul Patel
Mary Anne Choi
Dorothy Fan
Vincent Man
Cathy Thao
Thanh Thai
Michaela Vachuska
Milana Vachuska
Michael Xu
Cynthia S. Valle-Oseguera
Carly A. Ranson
Christopher Pham
Edward L Rogan
Mark P Walberg
joseph A Woelfel
author_sort Rajul Patel
title Bridging the Gap: Collaboration between a School of Pharmacy, Public Health, and Governmental Organizations to provide Clinical and Economic Services to Medicare Beneficiaries
title_short Bridging the Gap: Collaboration between a School of Pharmacy, Public Health, and Governmental Organizations to provide Clinical and Economic Services to Medicare Beneficiaries
title_full Bridging the Gap: Collaboration between a School of Pharmacy, Public Health, and Governmental Organizations to provide Clinical and Economic Services to Medicare Beneficiaries
title_fullStr Bridging the Gap: Collaboration between a School of Pharmacy, Public Health, and Governmental Organizations to provide Clinical and Economic Services to Medicare Beneficiaries
title_full_unstemmed Bridging the Gap: Collaboration between a School of Pharmacy, Public Health, and Governmental Organizations to provide Clinical and Economic Services to Medicare Beneficiaries
title_sort bridging the gap: collaboration between a school of pharmacy, public health, and governmental organizations to provide clinical and economic services to medicare beneficiaries
publisher University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
series INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
issn 2155-0417
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Objective: Promoting healthy communities through the provision of accessible quality healthcare services is a common mission shared by schools of pharmacy, public health departments, and governmental agencies. The following study seeks to identify and detail the benefits of collaboration between these different groups. Methods: In total, 112 mobile clinics targeting Medicare beneficiaries were held in 20 cities across Northern/Central California from 2007 to 2016. Under the supervision of licensed pharmacists, trained student pharmacists provided vaccinations, health screenings, Medicare Part D plan optimization services, and Medication Therapy Management (MTM) to patients at each clinic site. Clinic support was extended by public health departments, governmental agency partners, and a health professional program. Results: Since clinic inception, 8,996 patients were provided services. In total, 19,441 health screenings and 3,643 vaccinations were collectively provided to clinic patients. We assisted 5,549 beneficiaries with their Part D benefit, resulting in an estimated aggregate out-of-pocket drug cost savings of $5.7 million. Comprehensive MTM services were provided to 4,717 patients during which 8,184 medication-related problem (MRP) were identified. In 15.3% of patients, the MRP was determined severe enough to warrant prescriber follow-up. In total, 42.9% of clinic patients were from racial/ethnic minority groups and 25.5% had incomes ≤150% of the Federal Poverty Level. Conclusion: Collaboration between a school of pharmacy, public health departments, and governmental organizations can effectively serve Medicare beneficiary populations and result in: 1) lower out-of-pocket drug costs, 2) minimization of medication-related problems, 3) increased vaccination uptake, and 4) increased utilization of health screenings. Conflict of Interest We declare no conflicts of interest or financial interests that the authors or members of their immediate families have in any product or service discussed in the manuscript, including grants (pending or received), employment, gifts, stock holdings or options, honoraria, consultancies, expert testimony, patents and royalties. Treatment of Human Subjects: IRB review/approval required and obtained   Type: Original Research
topic Medicare
Collaboration
Interprofessional eduction
Public Health
Medication Therapy Management
Health Screenings/Vaccinations
url https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/986
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