Pharmacists and Provider Status

What is provider status?  Why is it important to the profession to gain?

Pharmacists and pharmacists’ patient care services are not included in key sections of the Social Security Act (SSA), which determines eligibility for health care programs such as Medicare Part B. In the case of Medicare Part B, the omission of pharmacists as listed providers limits Medicare beneficiaries’ access to pharmacists’ services in the outpatient setting. Other health care professionals who are listed as providers in Part B of the SSA include physicians, physician’s assistants, certified nurse practitioners, qualified psychologists, clinical social workers, certified nurse midwives, and certified registered nurse anesthetists. In addition to providers, Part B provides the list of medical and other health services covered.

Many state and private health plans often cite the omission from Medicare Part B as a reason for lack of coverage for beneficiaries or lack of compensation of pharmacists for providing comprehensive, patient-centered care. Omission from Medicare Part B can also result in barriers to optimizing the use of pharmacists’ patient care services in emerging integrated care delivery models promoted by the Affordable Care Act (ACA), such as medical homes and accountable care organizations (ACOs), which are located in another section of the SSA.

The American Pharmacists Association has a full page of the hows and whys.

The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists is on board as well.

California has passed legislation and just like most bills starting in CA, it will sweep the country.

Here's a summary of what was passed in California last year:

Pharmacist Provider Status Legislation SB 493 (Hernandez) Summary

Now that the pharmacist provider status bill has been signed by the Governor, many pharmacists are asking: “what does this bill do for me?” SB 493 grants all pharmacists certain authorities in all practice settings that had previously been limited to inpatient settings or integrated systems. The bill also establishes a new “Advanced Practice Pharmacist” recognition. This recognition can be granted when specified experience and/or certification requirements are met. The Advanced Practice Pharmacist recognition is not mandatory, but it does allow pharmacists to provide additional services. Below is a summary of SB 493’s changes, which take effect January 1, 2014, though some provisions require regulations by the Board of Pharmacy and will not take effect until those regulations are approved.

  • Declares pharmacists as healthcare providers who have the authority to provide health care services.
  • Authorizes all licensed pharmacists to:
  • Administer drugs and biologics when ordered by a prescriber. Previously, this was limited to oral and topical administration. SB 493 allows pharmacists to administer drugs via other methods, including by injection. 
  • Provide consultation, training, and education about drug therapy, disease management and disease prevention. 
  • Participate in multidisciplinary review of patient progress, including appropriate access to medical records. 
  • Furnish self-administered hormonal contraceptives (the pill, the patch, and the ring) pursuant to a statewide protocol. This authority is similar to the existing emergency contraception protocol. Once a statewide protocol is adopted by the Board of Pharmacy, it will automatically apply to all pharmacists. 
  • Furnish travel medications recommended by the CDC not requiring a diagnosis. 
  • Furnish prescription nicotine replacement products for smoking cessation pursuant to a statewide protocol if certain training, certification, recordkeeping, and notification requirements are met. Once a statewide protocol is adopted by the Board of Pharmacy, it will automatically apply to all pharmacists. 
  • Independently initiate and administer immunizations to patients three years of age and older if certain training, certification, recordkeeping, and reporting requirements are met. A physician protocol is still required to administer immunizations on children younger than three years of age. 
  • Order and interpret tests for the purpose of monitoring and managing the efficacy and toxicity of drug therapies, in coordination with the patient’s primary care provider or diagnosing prescriber. 
  • Establishes an Advanced Practice Pharmacist (APP) recognition, and authorizes APPs to:  
  1. Perform patient assessments
  2. Order and interpret drug therapy-related tests in coordination with the patient’s primary care provider or diagnosing prescriber. 
  3. Refer patients to other healthcare providers. 
  4. Initiate, adjust, and discontinue drug therapy pursuant to an order by a patient’s treating prescriber and in accordance with established protocols. 
  5. Participate in the evaluation and management of diseases and health conditions in collaboration with other healthcare providers. 
  6. Requires pharmacists seeking recognition as APPs to complete any two of the following three criteria: Earn certification in a relevant area of practice, such as ambulatory care, critical care, oncology pharmacy or pharmacotherapy. Complete a postgraduate residency program. Have provided clinical services to patients for one year under a collaborative practice agreement or protocol with a physician, APP pharmacist, CDTM pharmacist, or health system.

I want recognition for the value brought to patients and the health care team.

Pharmacists are an integral part of the healthcare team.  I hope to see this sweep across the country in the next few years and that board certification propels us into a whole new recognized role.

 

 

New Year's Resolutions for the Pharmacist

Most of the time, the New Year ushers in thoughts of dropping 15-20 lbs and signing up for a few road races.  No, not to race, but just to finish.  This year, I have been much more introspective thinking about life and career and all the above.  Maybe some of these pharmacy related resolutions will be similar to yours.

  1. Begin studying for another certification.  I am heavily learning toward the BCNSP.  I am in no hurry because quite honestly, there is no reason professionally to obtain.  I would just accomplish something that has interested me in the past.  I used to work for a home infusion company and there was a pharmacist (JB) who was quite fabulous.  I am sure he still is today, but I noticed he has this designation and is probably running circles around most in the area when it comes to nutrition.  It is quite an in-depth topic from enteral to parenteral nutrition, and I am predicting another 1-2 year study.  I have purchased the material and have started though not nearly as much gusto as the BCPS so far.  If you are not certified, consider it.  IT MATTERS.
  2. Stop worrying about what other pharmacists think about you.  You cannot live your professional life trying to beat out or outsmart the guy/gal next to you.  Yes, you may be in fact more qualified and more experienced, but you cannot control how a company decides to utilize your experience or knowledge.  Perhaps a position in a different area will open up and any type of learning on the side you have pursued will open doors!?  Sometimes it is just timing and sometimes just sheer luck.  In the meantime, focus on being a better pharmacist.  Focus on remaining competitive and the go-to person for all things current.  If you keep up with the current practice and move forward, the people who win are your patients.
  3. Look to the future.  Prepare for the future so that when it happens, you will be ready to step right into the role without any problems.

Those are my resolutions for pharmacy this year.  I hope 2014 holds many wonderful things for you in your career whether it is pursuing a board certification or attending an update to begin the process to do more for your patients than last year.

Cheers!

The Study Schedule I Used in 2013

I have received many requests about how I studied for the exam, and I wanted to share what I did.  I utilized the same sort of format that Ted Williams' website mentions.  His website, though dated material, still has the outline I'd focus on (with ACCP) and High Yield Med Reviews perhaps if you need more in-depth material to understand the topics better (depending on your level of expertise and day-to-day work).

• Domain 1: Patient-specific Pharmacotherapy (60% of the examination) • Domain 2: Retrieval, generation, interpretation and dissemination of knowledge in pharmacotherapy (25% of the examination) • Domain 3: Systems and Population-based Pharmacotherapy (15% of the examination)

  • Week 1:  Statistics - know statistics VERY well.  I spent a lot of time on statistics outside of this first week, but every year I'd start again WITH statistics and end with statistics.  In the beginning, I hated statistics.  Today, I love it.  I guess repeated exposure grows on you.
  • Week 2:  Pediatrics
  • Week 3:  Geriatrics
  • Week 4:  Kinetics
  • Week 5: Neurology
  • Week 6: Psychiatry
  • Week 7:  Fluids, Electrolytes, and Nutrition
  • Week 8: Acute and Critical Care
  • Week 9:  Regs, Policy/Practice, Pharmacoeconomics
  • Week 10:  Endocrine
  • Week 11:  ID
  • Week 12:  HIV/ID
  • Week 13:  Men/Women's Health
  • Week 14 and 15:  Outpatient Cardiology
  • Week 16:  Ambulatory Care
  • Week 17:  GI
  • Week 18:  Nephrology
  • Week 19:  Oncology
  • Week 20:  Biostats Refresh, Clinical Trial Design, Pharmacoeconomics, Policy/Practice, Economic/Humanistic Outcomes
  • Week 21:  Peds, Geriatrics, Kinetics
  • Week 22:  Neurology, Psych, Fluids, Elytes/Nutrition
  • Week 23:  Acute Care/Critical Care
  • Week 24:  ID, HIV, Endocrine
  • Week 25:

    Amb Care, Outpt Cards, M/W Health

  • Week 26:  G

    I, Nephrology, Oncology

  • Week 27:

    Biostats Refresh/Applications, Clinical Trial Design, Policy/Practice,

    Economic/Humanistic Outcomes

  • Week 28:  Peds, Geriatrics, Kinetics
  • Week 29:

    Neurology, Psychiatry, Fluids, Elytes & Nutrition

  • Week 30:

    Acute Care Cards 1 and 2, Critical Care 1 and 2

  • Week 31:

    ID, HIV/ID, Endocrine

  • Week 32:

    Amb Care, Outpt Cards, M/W Health

  • Week 33:  GI, Neph, Oncology
  • Week 34:  Review all
  • Week 35:  Review all

This is basically how I tackled it each time.  Pace yourself to cover the material and try to make 3 loops, even 4 if possible through all of the material.

This book is good for statistics.

High Yield Med Review is good for in-depth lectures and study material.  Cheaper than ACCP too, I believe.

ACCP - hands down, the best bang for your buck as far as study materials -- succinct and up-to-date.  This link is for 2013.  Sometimes people sell theirs.  Student Doctor Forum has those selling.

ASHP has great material as well.  In fact I used them for the Pharmacoeconomic section and in hindsight wish I had researched them a bit more for test prep.

 

Hope this helps someone.

By the way, we had our educational walk-through with a representative of JCAHO, and he mentioned three times about how important board certification was.  Our facility only has two practicing pharmacists that are board certified (including me).  There are two in management who have it.  Other than that, I hope more will attempt.

 

Why Should You Become Board Certified?

m-btn-findbcpI enjoy brainstorming with other pharmacists and asking them their opinions on becoming board certified.  I remember back in 1998-1999, the assistant dean of my alma mater, University of Tennessee at Memphis stressed how important it was for us to consider residency and board certification.  At the time, I was a 25-26 year old making decisions that would impact me for life.  You see, I decided back then to decline that path.  I only saw the dollars that were before me and the student loan debt piling up.  I quipped, "Why would I want to work for half-pay or less for a whole year?" Why?  Hindsight is 20/20.  Fast forward to a 40 year-old in the profession for over 14 years experiencing all sorts of different experiences, and after trying most, I have a couple of regrets as far as my tenure in pharmacy school.  I regret not doing a rotation overseas.  I regret not doing an residency.  I regret that I dismissed more learning inferior to money.

I know not everyone feels like me, and that is understandable.  Perhaps I am just a different sort who becomes stir-crazy when bored.  Whatever the reason, I decided to pursue BCPS last year.  I missed it barely the first time and immediately jumped back up and started studying again.  I work in a small community setting in a smaller city and though it is nothing like Memphis was in terms of clinical opportunities, these opportunities can be found with a little thought.  Passing the test was probably up there with other accomplishments in life - like the time I finished my first marathon (26.2 mile run) in 2002.  Victory!

Why should you become board certified?

  1. BPS website quotes:  "From patient to provider, the value of the BPS-certified practitioner registers throughout the health care continuum. For pharmacy professionals, documentation of specialized experience and skills yields the additional benefits of personal satisfaction, financial rewards and career advancement."  I definitely agree with most of this though most I have talked with did not receive a raise unless they changed jobs.  In the past where BCPS maybe helped with landing a clinical job, today it may be the thing to separate you from a PharmD without BCPS.
  2. If you have been out of school for over four to five years, you can be sure you have already forgotten some of what you have learned and have not learned new material being presented to new graduates.  You can depend on your local hospitals' computer system to remind you of every little thing (trusting those that program such systems) OR you can take charge of what you know and remain committed to being the best you can be.  Think of it like this, if you work in a hospital and you are commanding larger salaries than new graduates with fresher knowledge, there comes a point where you are replaceable.  Be your best to remain competitive in your field.  This means utilizing continuing education to really learn something and not last-minute cramming to renew your state license.  (Guilty, by the way).
  3. A paper wrote in 2006 (seven years ago) states that "Future Clinical Pharmacy Practitioners Should Be Board-Certified Specialists."  In the past clinical pharmacists have not made board certification a priority, but this is changing rapidly with not only clinical positions but in staff positions.  Clinical faculty and preceptors MUST be board certified, I believe.  As pharmacists move toward the direction of becoming reimbursed professionals for optimizing medications, there will be a trend toward licensing agencies requiring board certification in certain scenarios.  Sure, it is not TODAY, but if you would have asked me in 2000 if I thought the market would be in the shape it is with oversaturation, I would have done things VERY differently in 1999-2002.  Direct patient care IS coming.
  4. The PharmD curriculum is not enough to be able to interact in sync with other healthcare professionals.  Experience in dealing with physicians and their assistance along with board certification will take you to the next level in recommending appropriate treatment.  Placing a new graduate in a clinical position without experience and expecting them to build relationships with clinicians is not the best case scenario for the patient.  Requiring a board certification ensures a higher level of expertise and should be a requirement of all hospitals (in my opinion).  I know, I know.  Not something anyone wants to enforce, but wow!  The benefits in just preparing and studying for the test are immense.
  5. Last, but not least, you should become board certified to give your patients the best care possible.  This was my number one reason.  I remember the day I sat at my desk years ago and realized I had no idea about new guidelines (and even some not-so-new) and that centralized order entry had essentially turned me into a robot at a computer verifying at will, I realized it was time to make some personal changes that would cost me both dollar and more importantly time but result in amazing benefits for my patients.  BCPS.

I hope that you will consider these reasons.  For the most part most people are reluctant because no one wants to fail, much less fail twice.  Yes, it is humbling to fail once, but it is euphoric to pass (even the second time).  Especially for someone like me, I prove you can teach an old dog new tricks.  I hope to inspire more of you to seek to be your best in our profession, stop worrying about your coworkers and if you fail, and realize that any amount of learning that happens will significantly change how you practice pharmacy.

In the future, I am thinking about tackling another certification.  I hope you will, too!

 

BCPS vs CSP | Pharmacist Certifications' Old and New Players

In a world where pharmacists are being created at a much higher rate than years ago, pharmacists (and employers) are seeking out ways to differentiate themselves from the next BSPharm or PharmD down the road.  In a career where experience can be either a pro or a con, certification or board certification has become a new reality and benchmark to separate one pharmacist from another. This is becoming even more popular for those that did not do a residency after  pharmacy school and want to be perceived with the same knowledge as those who did. First, let us begin with the new player on the block:  Certified Specialty Pharmacist (CSP)

The  The SPCB, launched in 2012, is an independent, not-for-profit entity whose sole mission is the certification of professionals who meet specific eligibility requirements and pass a rigorous assessment instrument. The SPCB is independent from any trade or professional association. The SPCB is dedicated to promoting the specialty pharmacist's unique responsibility, maintaining the highest quality standards, and advocating for professional development to ensure that specialty patients receive appropriate care now and in the future. The goal of the CSP program is to assure the general public receives care from qualified, educated, and knowledgeable specialty pharmacists.

This certification is credentialed by the National Commission for Certifying Agencies (NCCA).

Personally, I have never heard of the CSP until the other day.  Here is the handbook if you are interested.  Fairly new, I cannot find how many pharmacists have this today.

 

Second, the Board of Pharmacy Specialties has been around since 1976 as an independent certification agency of APhA.  These certifications from BPS are also accredited by the National Commission for Certifying Agencies (NCCA).  According to their website:

The purpose of the BPS certification programs is:

A. To grant recognition of appropriate pharmacy practice specialties based on criteria established by the Board of Pharmacy Specialties;

B. To establish standards for certification and recertification of pharmacists in recognized pharmacy practice specialties;

C. To grant qualified pharmacists certification and recertification in recognized pharmacy practice specialties;

D. To serve as a coordinating agency and informational clearinghouse for organizations and pharmacists in recognized pharmacy practice specialties; and

E. To enhance public/consumer protection by developing effective certification programs for specialty practices in pharmacy.

The overriding concern of BPS is to ensure that the public receives the level of pharmacy services that will improve a patient's quality of life. Toward this goal, the Board has recognized specialty practice areas.

Here is a link to search for BPS certified pharmacists.  A total of 3,213 pharmacists were either certified or recertified in six specialties including the newest BPS specialty, ambulatory care pharmacy, which pharmacists could become certified in for the first time in 2011. There are now 15,862 BPS Board Certified Pharmacists (5.6% of pharmacists in the workforce), which represents an increase of 22% from 2011.  According to the United States Department of Labor, there are 281,560 pharmacists in the country.

BPS offers certifications in several specialties:

  • Ambulatory Care Pharmacy
  • Critical Care Pharmacy (Fall 2015 exam begins)
  • Nuclear Pharmacy
  • Nutrition Support Pharmacy
  • Oncology Pharmacy
  • Pediatric Pharmacy (Fall 2015 exam begins)
  • Pharmacotherapy (the most popular certification)
  • Psychiatric Pharmacy
  • Added Qualifications (see website for more in-depth information)