Artigo Revisado por pares

Establishing a clinical pharmacy technician at a United States Army military treatment facility

2016; Elsevier BV; Volume: 56; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.japh.2016.04.564

ISSN

1544-3450

Autores

Jennifer L. Evans, Ellen M. Gladd, Alicia C. Gonzalez, Salman Tranam, Joni M. Larrabee, Sarah E. Lipphardt, Tina T. Chen, Michael D. Ronn, John Spain,

Tópico(s)

Cardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes

Resumo

Abstract Objectives To describe the creation of a clinical pharmacy technician position within the U.S. Army and to identify the personal skills and characteristics required to meet the demands of this role. Setting An outpatient military treatment facility located in Maryland. Practice description The clinical pharmacy technician position was designed to support clinical pharmacy services within a patient-centered medical home. Practice innovation Funding and a position description were established to hire a clinical pharmacy technician. Expected duties included administrative (45%), patient education (30%), and dispensing (25%). Local policy, in accordance with federal law and U.S. Army regulations, was developed to define the expanded technician responsibility to deliver patient medication education. Results In the initial 3 months, the clinical pharmacy technician spent 24 hours per week on clinical activities, affording an additional 10-15 hours per week for clinical pharmacists to provide patient care. Completed consults increased from 41% to 56%, and patient-pharmacist encounters increased from 240 to 290 per month. The technician, acting as a clinical pharmacist extender, also completed an average of 90 patient encounters independently each month. As a result of these improvements, the decision was made to hire a second technician. Currently, the technicians spend 28-40 hours per week on clinical activities, offsetting an average of 26 hours per week for the clinical pharmacists. Conclusion A patient-centered medical home clinical pharmacy technician can reduce the administrative workload for clinical pharmacists, improve their efficiency, and enhance the use of clinical pharmacy services. Several characteristics, particularly medication knowledge, make pharmacy technicians particularly suited for this role. The results from the implementation of a clinical pharmacy technician at this military treatment facility resulted in an Army-wide expansion of the position and suggested applicability in other practice sites, particularly in federal pharmacies.

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