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Clinical and Financial Impact of Pharmacy Services in the Intensive Care Unit: Pharmacist and Prescriber Perceptions
Author(s) -
MacLaren Robert,
Brett McQueen R.,
Campbell Jon
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
pharmacotherapy: the journal of human pharmacology and drug therapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.227
H-Index - 109
eISSN - 1875-9114
pISSN - 0277-0008
DOI - 10.1002/phar.1226
Subject(s) - pharmacy , clinical pharmacy , pharmacist , reimbursement , medicine , family medicine , nursing , intensive care unit , pharmacy practice , hospital pharmacy , health care , psychiatry , economics , economic growth
Study Objective To compare pharmacist and prescriber perceptions of the clinical and financial outcomes of pharmacy services in the intensive care unit ( ICU ). Design ICU pharmacists were invited to participate in the survey and were asked to invite two ICU prescriber colleagues to complete questionnaires. Setting ICU s with clinical pharmacy services. Methods The questionnaires were designed to solicit frequency, efficiency, and perceptions about the clinical and financial impact (on a 10‐point scale) of pharmacy services including patient care (eight functions), education (three functions), administration (three functions), and scholarship (four functions). Basic services were defined as fundamental, and higher‐level services were categorized as desirable or optimal. Respondents were asked to suggest possible sources of funding and reimbursement for ICU pharmacy services. Results Eighty packets containing one 26‐item pharmacy questionnaire and two 16‐item prescriber questionnaires were distributed to ICU pharmacists. Forty‐one pharmacists (51%) and 46 prescribers (29%) returned questionnaires. Pharmacists had worked in the ICU for 8.3 ± 6.4 years and devoted 50.3 ± 18.7% of their efforts to clinical practice. Prescribers generally rated the impact of pharmacy services more favorably than pharmacists. Fundamental services were provided more frequently and were rated more positively than desirable or optimal services across both groups. The percent efficiencies of providing services without the pharmacist ranged between 40% and 65%. Both groups indicated that salary support for the pharmacist should come from hospital departments of pharmacy or critical care or colleges of pharmacy. Prescribers were more likely to consider other sources of funding for pharmacist salaries. Both groups supported reimbursement of clinical pharmacy services. Conclusion Critical care pharmacy activities were associated with perceptions of beneficial clinical and financial outcomes. Prescribers valued most services more than pharmacists. Fundamental services were viewed more favorably than desirable or optimal services, possibly because they occurred more frequently or were required for safe patient care. Substantial inefficiencies may occur if pharmacy services disappeared. Considerable support existed for funding and reimbursement of critical care pharmacy services.