HealthDay News — According to a study published in the Journal of Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics, patients express preference for a pharmacy-driven model of primary care versus a pharmacy offering minimal primary care services.

Michael Feehan, PhD, from the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, and colleagues administered an online survey to 9202 adult patients, which included a discrete choice experiment to examine which scenario would be most likely to induce them to switch from their current pharmacy, leading to development of an optimal patient primary care service model. A subsequent online survey was administered to 50 payer-reimbursement decision-makers to examine the likelihood of this model being reimbursed.

The researchers found that the optimal model included the pharmacy offering appointments to see health care providers in the pharmacy, having access to full medical records, providing point-of-care diagnostic testing, offering health preventive screening, providing limited physical examinations, and drug prescribing. 


Continue Reading

The demand for this optimal model, with pharmacist as provider, was two-fold higher than for a base pharmacy offering minimal primary care services (25.5 versus 12.6%); demand was highest for Hispanic and African-American patients (30.6 and 30.7%, respectively). 

Sixty-six percent of payer reimbursement decision-makers indicated that their organization would be likely to reimburse this model.

“Development of a primary care pharmacy alternative, electronically linked to the current health system, should be considered as a healthcare delivery model moving forward,” the authors write.

Reference

Feehan M, et al. “Patient Preferences For Healthcare Delivery Through Community Pharmacy Settings In The USA: A Discrete Choice Study.” Journal of Clinical Pharmacy and Therapeutics. 2017. doi: 10.1111/jcpt.12574 [Epub ahead of print]

Related Articles