4.0 Article

Patient-centered health care using pharmacist-delivered medication therapy management in rural Mississippi

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN PHARMACISTS ASSOCIATION
Volume 52, Issue 6, Pages 802-809

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1331/JAPhA.2012.10192

Keywords

Patient-centered health care; medication therapy management; innovative practice models; rural health; health information technology

Funding

  1. Health Resources and Services Administration [U1FRH07411]

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Objective: To describe and provide preliminary clinical and economic outcomes from a pharmacist-delivered patient-centered health care (PCHC) model implemented in the Mississippi Delta. Setting: Mississippi between July 2008 and June 2010. Practice description: 13 community pharmacies in nine Mississippi Delta counties. Practice innovation: This PCHC model implements a comprehensive medication therapy management (MTM) program with pharmacist training, individualized patient encounters and group education, provider outreach, integration of pharmacists into health information technology, and on-site support in community pharmacies in a medically underserved region with a large burden of chronic disease and health disparities. The program also expands on traditional MTM services through initiatives in health literacy/cultural competency and efforts to increase the provider network and improve access to care. Main outcome measures: Criteria-based clinical outcomes, quality indicator reports, cost avoidance. Results: PCHC services have been implemented in 13 pharmacies in nine counties in this underserved region, and 78 pharmacists and 177 students have completed the American Pharmacists Association's MTM Certificate Training Program. Preliminary data from 468 patients showed 681 encounters in which 1,471 drug therapy problems were identified and resolved. Preliminary data for clinical indicators and economic outcome measures are trending in a positive direction. Conclusion: Preliminary data analyses suggest that pharmacist-provided PCHC is beneficial and has the potential to be replicated in similar rural communities that are plagued with chronic disease and traditional primary care provider shortages. This effort aligns with national priorities to reduce medication errors, improve health outcomes, and reduce health care costs in underserved communities.

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