25
Maximizing the Effectiveness of E-Prescribing Between Physicians and Community Pharmacies: Implementation AHRQ 2007 Conference September 27, 2007 Principal Investigator: Kate Lapane, PhD Project Manager: Ken Whittemore, MBA Co-Investigators: Catherine Dubé, EdD Mike Rupp, PhD Terri Jackson, PhD

AHRQ 2007 Conference September 27, 2007

  • Upload
    booker

  • View
    42

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Maximizing the Effectiveness of E-Prescribing Between Physicians and Community Pharmacies: Implementation. Principal Investigator: Kate Lapane, PhD Project Manager: Ken Whittemore, MBA Co-Investigators: Catherine Dubé, EdD Mike Rupp, PhD Terri Jackson, PhD. AHRQ 2007 Conference - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Maximizing the Effectiveness of E-Prescribing Between Physicians and Community Pharmacies:Implementation

AHRQ 2007 Conference September 27, 2007

Principal Investigator:Kate Lapane, PhD

Project Manager:Ken Whittemore, MBA

Co-Investigators:Catherine Dubé, EdDMike Rupp, PhDTerri Jackson, PhD

Page 2: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

OVERVIEW

Testing of interoperability of the standards; certification processes and pilot testing

Evaluation of the implementation of the standards from multiple perspectives using mixed-method approach

BREADTH: geography, e-prescribing technologies, practice settings, perspectives 6 states, 6 vendors, ~275 docs in ~88 practices , 276 retail pharmacy stores, ~1100 patients

OBJECTIVES OF THE PROJECT

Page 3: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

The Perspectives

Page 4: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Evaluation Strategies:

• Mixed-method approach– Qualitative methods:

• Focus groups

• Performance analyses (on-site observation) – physician practice only

– Quantitative• Survey

– Providers (physicians and other prescribers, pharmacists and pharmacy techs)

– Patients• Documentation of interventions (pharmacy)

Page 5: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Clinician perspectives

Page 6: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Just because a practice has e-Rx capabilities….

• Not all clinicians within the practice e-rx– Training issues– Lack of understanding of benefits

• Not all clinicians use e-rx with all patients

• Not with all prescriptions– Regulations (scheduled drugs)

• Not all functionalities of e-Rx

Page 7: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Frequency of reviewing patient PBM med history

0% 50% 100%

F

E

D

C

B

A

OVERALL

Always Most of time Sometimes Never

Phys

icia

n So

ftwar

e Ve

ndor

Page 8: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Non-clinician use of review of medication history

0 20 40 60 80 100

C

A

OVERALL

Yes No

• Users of two vendors reported significant use of functionality among non-clinicians.

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70

C

A

OVERALL

Most/All of the time Sometimes Never

Review patient medication history? Frequency of use of functionality?

• If workflow structured to permit it, non-clinicians use functionality frequently.

Vend

or

Vend

or

Page 9: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Variation in frequency of updating medication list with patient

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

F

E

D

C

B

A

OVERALL

Always Most of time Sometimes Never

Phys

icia

n So

ftwar

e Ve

ndor

Page 10: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

F

E - State 2

E - State 1

D

C

A

OVERALL

Vend

or

Very useful Somewhat useful Not useful

Usefulness of patient’s medication history provided through your e-prescribing software in reconciling the active medication list?

Page 11: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Med history – missed opportunities?

• Data may not be displayed optimally• Used mostly if there is a problem–

– drill back down to learn more• Need to harness the power of med history

and train clinicians to use data prospectively to prevent medication issues

Page 12: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Patient perceptions regarding frequency of discussion with clinician

0 20 40 60 80

Never

Sometimes

Often/Always

Percentage

E-Rx No E-Rx

Adherence Accuracy of Medication List

0 20 40 60 80 100

Never

Sometimes

Often/Always

Percentage

E-Rx No E-Rx

Page 13: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

ALERT FATIGUE…….

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

F

E

D

C

B

A

OVERALL

Never Sometimes Most/Always

Phys

icia

n So

ftwar

e Ve

ndor

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

F

E

D

C

B

A

OVERALL

Never Sometimes Most/Always

DOSE CHECKS DRUG-DRUG INTERACTIONS

Page 14: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Pharmacy perspective

Page 15: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Distribution of personnel survey responses by pharmacy chain organization

7 36 42

813

12965

2

c d f h i j k

Pharmacy chain organizations

Note: Respondents from 276 stores with minimum e-Rx activity (5 per day).

RUPP, JACKSON.

Page 16: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Pharmacy perspective

Satisfaction with e-Prescribing

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%

Pharmacist

Technician

Intern

Very DissatisfiedModerately DissatisfiedSomewhat Dissatisfied

Somewhat SatisfiedModerately SatisfiedVery Satisfied

Very Satisfied 18.7% 19.0% 14.3%

Moderately Satisfied 33.9% 34.2% 48.6%

Somewhat Satisfied 28.8% 28.3% 28.6%

Somewhat Dissatisfied 11.5% 10.6% 5.7%

Moderately Dissatisfied 5.2% 5.1% 2.9%

Very Dissatisfied 2.0% 2.8% 0.0%

Pharmacist Technician Intern

RUPP M, JACKSON T.

Page 17: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Pharmacist perceptionsHow eRxs Compare: Pharmacists (n=446)

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100%

Safety

Effectiveness

Efficiency

Pt Communication

MD Communication

Pt Relations

MD Relations

Much WorseSomewhat WorseNo ChangeSomewhat BetterMuch Better

Much Better 31.4% 23.1% 28.0% 11.7% 18.3% 11.0% 13.7%

Somewhat Better 41.5% 47.4% 47.0% 23.6% 30.2% 33.6% 27.7%

No Change 16.0% 20.9% 14.1% 52.3% 25.7% 43.5% 40.3%

Somewhat Worse 9.3% 7.7% 9.1% 10.4% 21.4% 10.4% 15.1%

Much Worse 1.8% 0.9% 1.8% 2.0% 4.3% 1.6% 3.2%

Safety Effectiveness Efficiency

Pt Communicati

on

MD Communicati

on Pt Relations MD

Relations

RUPP M, JACKSON T.

Page 18: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Variation in how e-RX processed

• Most chains drop e-Rx into the store fill queue• Some print e-RX and then process (phasing out, short

term transition issue)• Most auto populate fields• Images of e-RX available on some systems• Some chains treat e-Rx with lower response urgency

than:– Customers waiting in line– Clinicians on the phone– Faxes on the printer

• Other chains grant e-RX the highest fill priority

Page 19: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Medication history for pharmacists?

• Currently not available to pharmacists– Some chain wide – Some store only

• No sharing across pharmacies

Page 20: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Patient Perspectives

Page 21: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Does E-Rx offer potential?

Page 22: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Geriatric patient perspective on e-Rx

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Stonglypreferpaper

Stronglyprefer e-

rx

E-RxNo E-rx

Notes of caution Q&A:

When do you expect your Rx to be ready?

Paper RX helps me remember to pick up my RX?

18% IMMEDIATELY!

57% - 74% agree!

Page 23: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Geriatric patient perspective

• Mismatch in perceptions– Clinicians think that discussions are occurring

more frequently than patients report• Med history and formulary/benefits:

– Potential to increase the frequency of medication discussions

– Change in quality of discussions unknown– Missed opportunities for improvement?

• Engaging the patient in the process

Page 24: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

Summary

• Less than optimal use of functionality

• How do we build it to make them come?2nd generation issues

• Who should come?– Engaging:

• Pharmacists – med history at point of dispensing?• Physicians – using med history in practice• Patients – tools for them?

Page 25: AHRQ 2007 Conference  September 27, 2007

BibliographyLapane KL, Quilliam, Dore. Roadblock on the Health IT Superhighway: E-prescribing and the

Controlled Substances Act. J Opioid Management 2007; 3(4):xxx-xxx.Lapane KL, Dube C, Schneider K, Quilliam BJ. Patient Perceptions Regarding E-prescriptions:

Is the Geriatric Patient Ready? J Am Geriatr Soc. 2007 Aug;55(8):1254-9.Dube C, Lapane KL, Rosen R. The business case for e-prescribing (in preparation)Goldman R, Dube C, Lapane KL. The status of electronic processing of refills (in preparation)Lapane KL, Waring ME, Schneider KL, Quilliam BJ, Dube C. A mixed-method Study Of The

Value Of Drug Alerts At Point Of E-Prescribing In Primary Care (in revision, JGIM)Dube C, Lapane KL. Medication history at the point of prescribing: changing clinical practice (in

preparation)Lapane KL, Dube C, Schneider K, Quilliam BJ. (Mis)Perceptions of Patients and Providers

Regarding Medication Issues, In revision, Am J Managed Care Lapane KL, Waring ME, Dube C, Schneider KL, Whittemore K. E-prescribing as an agent of

patient safety: A mixed-method study. (under review AHRQ)Rupp M, Jackson T. Pharmacy personnel attitudes towards e-prescribing. (in preparation)Jackson T, Rupp M. Medication therapy interventions on e-prescriptions. (in preparation) Lapane KL, Waring ME. Medicare Part D implementation: Lessons learned (in preparation)