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APhA and Health Care Reform
August 26, 2009

Where does APhA stand?
The U.S. House of Representatives and Senate are currently considering health care reform legislation which seeks to improve access to, reduce costs, and improve quality of health care. The American Pharmacists Association (APhA) has not taken a position on any of the current proposals and does not plan to take any position on the comprehensive bills. There are too many elements of each proposal for which we do not have policy, such as how to expand access (e.g., public option, employer mandate) and how to fund expanded access. Instead, APhA has and will continue to focus its advocacy efforts on the areas that are directly relevant to the practice of pharmacy and the patients that the profession serves (see below).


APhA’s Message to Congress
Regardless of how you finance or expand coverage, we must take advantage of this health reform opportunity to improve the quality of care and lower health care costs. Medications are a primary form of therapy for preventing or treating disease. Unfortunately, data show that patients – particularly the chronically ill – face great challenges in managing their medication therapy; these prevent them from meeting their treatment goals and result in preventable adverse events and avoidable costs. Health reform must address our nation’s medication-use crisis.

Pharmacists, when provided the opportunity to partner with patients and prescribers to help patients manage their medication therapy, improve health outcomes and reduce overall health care costs. Policymakers must take advantage of the lessons learned from public and private sector programs and fully optimize the clinical expertise and accessibility of pharmacists to help empower patients to manage their medication therapy.

Though many elements of current health care reform proposals that affect pharmacy and the patients that they serve are important, APhA’s priority is to change how health care is delivered by fully optimizing the skills and expertise of pharmacists. To accomplish this, policymakers must:

  • Include Pharmacists as Part of Integrated Care Models. The health care system must take advantage of the specialized knowledge and skills of all professionals working as part of a care team. The incorporation of pharmacists’ clinical services is necessary given the nearly universal role of medications in the care of patients with both chronic and acute disease.
  • Include Pharmacists in Payments for Transitional Care Activities. Pharmacists are medication experts and one of the most readily accessible providers. Medication use is a top reason for hospital readmissions. Pharmacists on the transitional care team can play a major role in preventing these events, as patients are discharged from the hospital or transferred from one care setting to another.
  • Provide Medication Therapy Management Services. All health plans must provide a comprehensive pharmacy benefit that covers both medications and pharmacist services that ensure that the use of those medications is fully optimized and that therapeutic outcomes are achieved.
  • Conduct a Medication Therapy Management Pilot. As CMS and/or AHRQ are given additional authority and direction to conduct pilot projects, legislative proposals should ensure that the clinical role of pharmacists is an element of at least one project.
  • Include Pharmacists in Workforce Strategies. To assure that all Americans have access to the services of well-educated and trained pharmacists competent to meet specific health care needs of patients, legislative proposals must establish and finance a comprehensive federal health professions workforce strategy that includes pharmacists and schools of pharmacy.

How will it impact pharmacy?
Several elements of the House “Tri-Committee” and Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee’s proposals would directly impact pharmacy; for example there are proposals to:

  • Include medication compliance activities in efforts to reduce hospital readmissions.
  • Improve the Medicaid reimbursement formula for generic drug products.
  • Require proposed care teams to provide primary care providers support to assist in chronic care management activities such as medication therapy management services and medication reconciliation.
  • Require transitional care programs to include medication reconciliation and to develop discharge plans that include medication therapy management (MTM) services as appropriate
  • Exempt certain pharmacy suppliers from Medicare DMEPOS surety bond and accreditation requirements. Deem certain accreditation applications as meeting accreditation requirements.
  • Phase-out the Medicare Part D coverage gap (doughnut hole).
  • Require manufacturers to provide a 50% discount for beneficiaries in the doughnut hole; count 100% of the cost of the drug towards the patient’s true out-of-pocket (TrOOP) costs.
  • Repeal the Medicare Part D requirement that pharmacies serving long-term care facilities submit claims within 90 days.
  • Establish a grant program for medication therapy management services provided by pharmacists.
  • Establish pharmacy benefits management transparency requirements.
  • Establish prevention and wellness program grants.
  • Provide the Secretary of HHS the discretion to establish reimbursement rates for prescription drugs in a public plan.
  • Include schools of pharmacy in quality improvement demonstration programs.
  • Include medication compliance activities when developing and implementing quality incentive payment structures.
  • Include pharmacists and pharmacies in the manufacturer/distributor “gift” reporting requirements; and to include compounding pharmacies/ists in the definition of “manufacturer”.
  • Include pharmacists and schools of pharmacy in workforce strategies, including establishing a new loan repayment program that includes pharmacists.

For a detailed description, see the APhA Health Care Reform Message and Issue Chart.
 

What you can do to help?
The profession  to ensure that we are successful. Congress will be looking for cuts. We don’t want to be among them. Connect with your Members of Congress and their staff when they are home this month. Don’t let the August recess pass by without lending your voice — pharmacy’s voice — to the health care reform debate.

  • Visit your Members of Congress District Office or attend a local town hall meeting.
  • Conduct a pharmacy site visit with your Members of Congress and their staff.

To stay informed, join APhA’s Facebook Fan PageTwitterhealth care reform (HCR) e-community, and Advocacy Key Contact Network. Read CEO Tom Menighan’s blog and our daily HCR Hub updates. For additional information, go to APhA’s Government Affairs page.