Evolving Roles of Pharmacists: Integrating Medication Management Services

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Evolving Roles of Pharmacists: Integrating Management Services Marie Smith, PharmD, FNAP Palmer Professor and Assistant Dean, Practice and Policy Partnerships UCONN School of Pharmacy (marie.smith@uconn.edu) Eastern Medicaid Pharmacy Administrators Association Oct 22, 2014 1

Objectives Discuss the role of pharmacists practicing in a patient centered medical home (PCMH) Describe the measurable impacts of pharmacists on patient care in the community setting Identify the status and future of legislation recognizing pharmacists as health care providers

Pharmacist Training and Expertise Education and Training Entry level 6 or 7 yr degree (PharmD) 2 yrs Pharmacotherapeutics 1.5 yr Drug Info/Lit Eval n 3 yrs Pharmacy problem solving 4 yrs Patient care exp + clinical rotations Postgraduate Residencies and Fellowships Board certified Pharmacy Specialties (7) Ambulatory Care, Geriatrics, Nuclear, Nutrition Support, Oncology, Pharmacotherapy, Psychiatric Proposed: Pediatrics, Critical Care, Pain and Palliative Care Management Certificate Programs Advanced Pharmacy Practitioner Credentials Pharmacist s Expertise Pharmacology Pharmacotherapeutics Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics Drug Toxicities Adverse Drug Events, Interactions Drug Information and Evaluation Patient Safety Therapy Management (MTM) Identify, Resolve, and Prevent Med Problems Adherence Assessment Compliance and Persistence Pharmacoeconomics Outcomes Research Patient Communications/Health Literacy Pharmacy Practice Systems Pharmacists competencies are SYNERGISTIC (not duplicative) with those of other health professionals 3

PCMHs and Advanced Primary Care

Primary Care Dynamic Clinical Teams Ann Intern Med. 2013;159(9):620 626 Dynamic Teams A clinical care team for a given patient consists of the health professionals physicians, advance practice registered nurses, other registered nurses, physician assistants, clinical pharmacists, and other health care professionals with the training and skills needed to provide high quality, coordinated care services specific to the patient s clinical needs and circumstances. (American College of Physicians Position Paper, October 2013) Complementary Skills Primary care teams should include health care practitioners who have complementary skills to those of the physician to achieve quality improvement initiatives and improve physician productivity (K Grumbach, T Bodenheimer JAMA 2004;291:1246 1251) 5

Primary Care Management Gaps UPSTREAM FACTORS ~ 70 75% PRESCRIBING PRACTICES CLINICAL MONITORING and MANAGEMENT CARE COORDINATION Unnecessary Med Needs Different Med Dose Too Low/High Adverse Events Monitoring and Outcomes Prescribing PATIENT PRESCRIBER Rx Processing Patient Med Use at Home PATIENT BEHAVIOR, HEALTH LITERACY Adherence DOWNSTREAM FACTORS ~ 25 30% Gaps in safe and effective medication use are due to both clinician influenced factors and patient influenced factors 2010 Marie Smith, PharmD Written permission required for any use including copying, modifying, duplication, or distribution in any media or format. 6

Management Spectrum Low Interdisciplinary Team Engagement High High UPSTREAM Intensity of Service Reconciliation Targeted Therapy Management Comprehensive Therapy Management Monitoring and Coordination Low DOWNSTREAM Adherence Counseling Low Impact on Coordinated Care, Patient Outcomes, Cost Savings 2012, Marie Smith, PharmD Written permission required for any use including copying, modifying, duplication, or distribution in any media or format.. High 7

Management Cycle Identify medication discrepancies (EMR, patient report, pharmacy fill history, discharge summaries) Build/update a complete, accurate, and active patient medication list Reconciliation Set desired patient medication outcomes Determine best timing and frequency of routine lab tests for medications Monitor patient for therapeutic effects and potential toxicities in between office visits/adjust medications as needed Monitoring PATIENT PRESCRIBERS PHARMACIST Optimization Assess each medication for pharmacotherapy appropriateness, efficacy, safety, and adherence Prevent or detect/resolve drug therapy problems Develop patient medication action plan ongoing, new, changed, or discontinued medications Disseminate medication management report with actionable recommendations to PCP/other HCPs Coordination Coordinate drug therapy changes with patient/family, multiple prescribers, and community care providers (e.g., home health, dialysis, hospice) Verify drug therapy changes made across multiple pharmacies (e.g., community retail, outpatient clinics, specialty care, online, mail order, infusion centers, oncology centers) 2012, Marie Smith, PharmD Written permission required for any use including copying, modifying, duplication, or distribution in any media or format.. 8

Comprehensive Primary Care Initiative (CPC) Moving towards Comprehensive and High Value Primary Care strengthen freestanding primary care capacity by testing a model of comprehensive, accountable primary care supported by multiple payers Selection criteria: HIT use, recognized advanced primary care practice, patient panel covered by participating payers, participating in practice transformation and improvement activities, and diversity of geography, practice size and ownership structure. 7 regions 497 practices 2,347 providers serving an estimated 315,000 Medicare beneficiaries New York: Capital District Hudson Valley Region New Jersey: Statewide Ohio & Kentucky: Cincinnati Dayton Region Arkansas: Statewide Oklahoma: Greater Tulsa Region Colorado: Statewide Oregon: Statewide Multi payer initiative: 31 commercial payers/state Medicaid programs + Medicare Payers implement strategies that align with the CPC approach to achieve comprehensive primary care Began in Fall 2012.4 year initiative.$ 322 Million funding (comparison: ACOs =$252Million, PFP=$500Million) Year 1 reporting and analysis being conducted now

CPC Payment Model CMMI Payment (Practice Level) Traditional fee for service Risk adjusted care management fee: average $20 PBPM (range of $8 $40) in year 1 2; $15 PBPM in years 3 4 (advanced payment used for expanded care teams) Shared Savings: start in Year 2 Based on quality measures: (1) population health /public health; (2) clinical processes, effectiveness, patient safety; (3) care coordination; and ( 4) patient experience Other Payers Commitments Enhanced Financial Support for Participating Primary Care Practices invest in the infrastructure, staffing, education/training for 5 comprehensive primary care functions Sharing Actionable Data with CPC Practices; Multi payer common data sharing approach Aligning Quality Measures Common Approach towards Milestones and Accountability for Participating Practices

CPC Management started Jan 2014 CPC Implementation Guide for Management CPC Change Package Driver Change Concept 1.2 Planned Care for Chronic Manage medications to maximize therapeutic benefit and patient safety Conditions and Preventative at lowest cost. Care Use team based care to meet patient needs effectively. 1.3 Risk Stratified Care Management Manage care across transitions. 1.4 Patient and Caregiver Engage patients, families, and caregivers in developing a plan of care and Engagement prioritizing their goals for action. 1.5 Coordination of Care Ensure patient information necessary to provide care is available across the medical neighborhood. Level of intensity for med management to achieve CPC aims will require practices to: (1) integrate a clinically trained pharmacist as a member of the CPC care team (onsite, point of care) (2) adopt a collaborative practice model with face to face patient encounters (3) deliver comprehensive medication management services through an interdisciplinary team based approach to achieve patient specific goals of therapy with follow up evaluation Targeted patients high risk medications, complex medication regimens, insufficient response to treatment, care transitions Focus on 4 medication management processes med reconciliation, med optimization, med coordination, and med monitoring Establish collaborative drug therapy management (CDTM) agreements

Value of pharmacists in ACOs and IC Teams Unmet Needs Team based Care Pharmacists as Collaborative Managers Pharmacist Integration Models Workflow Revisions Challenges measures that matter Workforce development Payment reform Smith M, Bates DW, Bodenheimer T. Pharmacists Belong in ACOs and Integrated Care Teams. Health Affairs Nov 2013; 32:1963 1970.

Value of Management Services Two examples where pharamcists were involved in clinical care teams and provided medication management services for high risk, complex patient populations Overall directional trend to decrease inpatient admissions, preventable admissions, ED visits Transitional care group of patients were 20% less likely to experience a readmission during the subsequent year Jackson CT et al. Transitional care cut hospital readmissions for NC Medicaid patients with complex chronic conditions. Health Affairs Aug 2013: 1407 15. 13

Pharmacist Impact on HEDIS Measures HEDIS Measure 2013 HEDIS Plan Rate (Administrative) EPC Practice Community Pharmacist Model Embedded Pharmacist Model Family Practice A Embedded Pharmacist Model Internal Med Practice B National 90th Percentile (2012) Pharmacotherapy management of asthma (ASM) 87.71% 88.18% 97.37% 87.50% 95.24 Monitoring of persistent medication ACE/ARBs & diuretics (MPM C) 87.36% 92.40% 96.40% 97.60% 86.96% Potentially harmful drugdisease interactions in the elderly (DDE) *Inverted Measure Comprehensive Diabetes Care HbA1c Testing Comprehensive Diabetes Care Eye Exams Comprehensive Diabetes Care LDL C Screening Comprehensive Diabetes Care Attention for Nephropathy 15.36% 13.12% 10.71% 13.64% 14.29% 86.03% 91.09% 91.33% 91.30% 94.69% 52.98% 55.03% 50.67% 75.65% 73.72% 82.71% 89.88% 92.00% 89.57% 90.88% 78.91% 82.64% 85.33% 92.17% 90.42% Yellow = better than CDPHP Plan Rate Green = better than National 90 th Percentile performance Source: Used with permission of Capital District Physicians Health Plan (Albany NY) 14

Admissions and Therapy Management Services Source: Used with permission of Capital District Physicians Health Plan (Albany NY) 15

Business Case for Management Published studies demonstrate ROI 2:1 to 12:1 Incident to billing for Pharmacist provided Management services AAFP clarification letter from CMS http://www.aafp.org/news/practice professional issues/20140416incidenttoltr.html?cmpid=em_15935187_l1 Maximize Medicare wellness visits Lower referrals to specialists for med management challenges Fewer preventable readmissions and ED visits Maximizing quality improvement targets/performance incentives 16

Collaborative Drug Therapy Agreements Agreement between pharmacist and physician; state level practice acts allow CDTM in 47 states Source: CDC State Law Fact Sheet, Dec 2012

Provider Status for Pharmacists Is it necessary? Depends on payment structure Fee for service Global Payment or ACOs HR 4190 Amend SSA Medicare Part B for Pharmacists as Providers Pharmacy Coalition: 116+ congressional sponsors Bill to increase access and improve quality by enabling pharmacists to provide patient care services as consistent with their education, training and license in medically underserved areas or populations or health professional shortage areas (designated by HRSA). Consistent with Medicare reimbursement for other non physician practitioners, pharmacist services would typically be reimbursed at 85% of the physician fee schedule. 18