
Bristol Myers Squibb and National Community Pharmacists Association Pilot Rural Heart Health Care Initiatives

Key Takeaways
- Bristol Myers Squibb and NCPA collaborate to improve cardiovascular care in rural U.S. communities through specialized training for pharmacy technicians.
- The initiative targets 25 rural pharmacies in six states, enhancing care coordination and access to cardiovascular services.
BMS and NCPA to address cardiovascular disease and enhance patient care coordination with specialized training in rural Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Missouri pharmacies.
ALEXANDRIA, Va. (Oct. 7, 2025) – Today,
NCPA has launched a program in partnership with BMS to address health-related social needs and care coordination for patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD) by piloting community health worker specialized training for pharmacy technicians. Pharmacist-community health worker teams in 25 rural pharmacies across Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi and Missouri will be trained through a rigorous curriculum to more effectively evaluate patients with higher risk of CVD and guide them toward appropriate health care providers for further care and evaluation.
Additionally, NCPA is creating new access points at these same independent pharmacies for screening, monitoring and management of cardiovascular disease, funded through a separate and independent grant by BMS, as part of a pilot program to evaluate the impact of enhanced access to critical health care services in medically underserved communities.
CVD disproportionately impacts rural Americans, with adults in rural areas facing a 19 percent higher risk of developing heart failure and being
“Too many patients in rural America face barriers to cardiovascular care — barriers that tragically cost lives,” said Andrew Whitehead, vice president and head of Population Health at Bristol Myers Squibb. “Through our collaboration with NCPA, we are confronting these challenges head-on. By supporting the NCPA Community Health Worker training for pharmacy techs to further assist in the continuity of care for patients in these communities, we’re helping to close a critical gap in our health care system and reaffirming our commitment to creating equitable access to care for all.”
“We are pleased to partner with BMS to improve access to care for people in rural communities,” said B. Douglas Hoey, pharmacist, MBA, CEO of NCPA. “The NCPA Innovation Center has partnered with the 25 rural pharmacies to improve cardiovascular outcomes through care coordination, screenings, transition of care interventions, and making sure patients have access to the medicines they need to sustain and improve health. Community pharmacists and their teams are increasingly playing a bigger role in the health care of Americans, and we are excited to create new, sustainable models of pharmacy-based care.”
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