• J Manag Care Spec Pharm · Apr 2020

    Multicenter Study

    Implementation and Effect of a Pharmacist-to-Pharmacist Transitions of Care Initiative on Ambulatory Care Sensitive Conditions.

    • M Shawn McFarland, Ashley M Thomas, Emily Young, Candace Bryant, Jonathan C Hughes, Joy Hoffman, and Jennifer W Baker.
    • Clinical Practice Integration and Model Advancement, Clinical Pharmacy Practice Office, Pharmacy Benefits Management Services, Veterans Health Administration, Washington, DC.
    • J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2020 Apr 1; 26 (4): 513-519.

    BackgroundOne of the most vulnerable times in a patient's encounter with a health care system is during transitions of care (TOC), defined by the Joint Commission as the movement of a patient from one health care provider or setting to another. The use of a clinical pharmacist as a member of the care transitions team has received focused attention and shown improved benefit.ObjectiveTo determine the effect of a large-scale pharmacist-to-pharmacist TOC model where inpatient clinical pharmacists identify patients during a hospital stay, provide evidence-based care and education, and then coordinate follow-up with an outpatient clinical pharmacist who provided comprehensive medication management (CMM) under a scope of practice.MethodsThis was a multisite, single health care system, quasi-experimental, matched interrupted time series design study conducted at an integrated Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system. Patients admitted with a primary or secondary diagnosis of diabetes, hypertension, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and heart failure (HF) were included for enrollment. Clinical pharmacists rounding on inpatient medical teams provided evidence-based recommendations to optimize medications while coordinating follow-up by an outpatient clinical pharmacy specialist within 10 days of discharge for CMM. The primary endpoint of this study was to determine the effect on the composite all-cause 30-day acute care utilization rate (emergency department [ED] visit or hospital readmission) for patients discharged with a primary or secondary diagnosis of diabetes, hypertension, COPD, and HF compared with a comparator group of patients with similar discharge diagnosis before implementation of the TOC program.Results484 patients (242 in each group, with 366 heart failure, 66 COPD, 10 hypertension, and 42 diabetes) were included for analysis. For the primary outcome of composite 30-day, all-cause acute care utilization rates, no statistically significant difference was identified, with 26.9% of patients in the intervention group and 28.9% in the historical group readmitted or seen in the ED within 30 days of discharge (P = 0.6852). Outcomes for the HF index acute care utilization rate (i.e., admission for the same disease state discharged with), including 30-day index readmissions (P = 0.0014), 30-day index ED visits (P = 0.0047), and 90-day index readmissions for HF (P < 0.0001) were significantly reduced.ConclusionsOur study is one of the first to identify at-risk patients using rounding clinical pharmacists in the acute care arena and coordination of care systematically with a clinical pharmacy specialist practicing under a scope of practice targeted for CMM. Although the overall primary endpoint was not met, a reduction in acute care utilization rates for HF at 30 and 90 days can be achieved.DisclosuresNo outside funding supported this research. The authors report no conflicts of interest.

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