Journal of International Medical Research (Jan 2018)

“Pharming out” support: a promising approach to integrating clinical pharmacists into established primary care medical home practices

  • Kimberly D. Brunisholz,
  • Jeff Olson,
  • Jonathan W. Anderson,
  • Emily Hays,
  • Peggy M. Tilbury,
  • Bradley Winter,
  • Josh Rickard,
  • Sharon Hamilton,
  • Gregory Parkin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/0300060517710885
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46

Abstract

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Objective Embedding clinical pharmacists into ambulatory care settings needs to be assessed in the context of established medical home models. Methods A retrospective, observational study examined the effectiveness of the Intermountain Healthcare Collaborative Pharmacist Support Services (CPSS) program from 2012–2015 among adult patients diagnosed with diabetes mellitus (DM) and/or high blood pressure (HBP). Patients who attended this program were considered the intervention (CPSS) cohort. These patients were matched using propensity scores with a reference group (no-CPSS cohort) to determine the effect of achieving disease management goals and time to achievement. Results A total of 17,684 patients had an in-person office visit with their provider and 359 received CPSS (the matched no-CPSS cohort included 999 patients). CPSS patients were 93% more likely to achieve a blood pressure goal < 140/90 mmHg, 57% more likely to achieve HbA1c values < 8%, and 87% more likely to achieve both disease management goals compared with the reference group. Time to goal achievement demonstrated increasing separation between the study cohorts across the entire study period ( P < .001), and specifically, at 180 days post-intervention (HBP: 48% vs 27% P < .001 and DM: 39% vs 30%, P < .05). Conclusions CPSS participation is associated with significant improvement in achievement of disease management goals, time to achievement, and increased ambulatory encounters compared with the matched no-CPSS cohort.