
The Push for Pharmacist Provider Status
From a grassroots petition launched by a PharmD candidate to a concerted effort among CEOs of national pharmacy associations, the push is on to win health care provider status for pharmacists.
From a grassroots petition launched by a PharmD candidate to a concerted effort among CEOs of national pharmacy associations, the push is on to win health care provider status for pharmacists.
A chorus is rising in the pharmacy community, calling for the profession to be accorded health care provider status. From a Doctor of Pharmacy candidate who has started an online petition calling on President Obama to join the cause to the CEO of one of the country’s largest pharmacist associations who has identified it as a top priority, many feel that 2013 just might be the year when pharmacists win the right to be paid for the role they play in patient care.
The current goal is to have pharmacists designated as patient-care providers eligible for reimbursement under Medicare, which requires an act of Congress, but the hope is that other insurers will follow the program’s lead once this is achieved. In a
“The data are conclusive: Pharmacists improve medication-use outcomes for patients when they are included on the patient-care team,” Dr. Abramowitz wrote in an accompanying
Dr. Abramowitz noted that attaining provider status will require a great deal of concerted effort on a grassroots as well as state and national level. Toward the latter end, he wrote that he and the CEOs of other national pharmacy organizations will be meeting to plot a strategy for a successful campaign.
On the grassroots level, Steve Soman, a PharmD candidate at St. John’s University College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, has launched a
Soman modeled his campaign on a
Soman’s goal is to gain support from the general public as well as the pharmacy community. “We need the average Joe on the street to say, ‘How come pharmacists are not health care providers? I go to the pharmacist for my son’s vitamins. I go to the pharmacy for my grandma’s flu shots.They provide health care to me on a daily basis, make recommendations. So, as such, how come they are not health care providers?’” he said in an interview.
Provider status has the potential to bring pharmacists greater compensation and respect, Soman says, but also greater responsibility and demands for verification of their contribution to patient care. “Pharmacists will need to accept change, because when Medicare provides compensation, it’s not going to be free money,” he said. “They’re going to say, ‘You have to meet benchmark A, benchmark B, and goal C in order to get compensation.’”
A December 2012
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