Affiliation:
1. Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT;
2. Yale New Haven Hospital, New Haven, CT;
3. Smilow Cancer Hospital at Yale-New Haven, New Haven, CT;
4. Yale New Haven Health System, New Haven, CT;
5. Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, CT;
Abstract
108 Background: Recent focus has shown that oral chemotherapy is high risk for medical error. Our QOPI certification process identified that oral oncologic processes were marked by: lack of documentation in the EMR, patients receiving refills from third party pharmacies after prescription discontinuation, incorrect self-administration of medications due to lack of education, delivery delays, high copays, and underuse of available patient assistance programs. Methods: A multidisciplinary task force developed a program to expedite drug access, standardize consent, and ensure clinical support including education, adherence and toxicity monitoring. We expanded an existing health-system pharmacy to provide specialty services. Treatment protocols were created for every oral oncologic drug, which are routed to a clinical oncology pharmacist and the specialty pharmacy. Nursing and pharmacist verify all orders. Medication Assistance Program for copay support. Day 1, 5 and 21 pharmacist to patient calls. Multidisciplinary flow sheet documentation. Results: Today, 80% of our patients receive medication within 72 hours. Specialty pharmacists monitor toxicity even for patients whose prescriptions are filled by other pharmacies. Pharmacists have prevented more than 400 prescription errors. Today, monthly revenue before cost for the oral chemotherapy program is nearly than $4 million. The total revenue since initiation in February 2015 is over $44 million, yielding an approximately $9 million margin after costs. Funding through the medication assistance program exceeded $1 million thus far in 2016, with an average of 140 patients receiving assistance each month. Conclusions: A patient-centered multidisciplinary model integrating clinical, operational, financial, and IT resources optimized care for patients receiving oral oncologic therapy. This project transferred revenue from for-profit third party pharmacies to our non-profit health system, and revenue is used to provide enhanced education, monitoring, and patient assistance. Our collaborative improvement model can be adapted to many practice settings.
Publisher
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
Cited by
2 articles.
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