The BCPS and Tackling the Beast

I decided to take the BCPS this October. First of all, I have to admit the first time I even heard of this test, I thought it was a joke. I just figured it was something that wouldn't be recognizable as anything important. Fast forward thirteen years, and I believe this certification should be something most pharmacists should want to attempt. It is pricey though. I have a little over two months and have a ton of information to go through while trying to become a biostats expert. Wish me luck. I figured I could post some posts about recent guidelines in the next few months... Sort of a way to blog and study simultaneously. Genius?

AAFP Says No to Safe Use Class of Drugs

AAFP Says No to 'Safe Use' Class of DrugsBy Emily P. Walker, Washington Correspondent, MedPage Today Published: May 01, 2012

WASHINGTON -- The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) has voiced its opposition to an FDA proposal that would allow pharmacists to dispense some drugs without a prescription.

Currently, the FDA approves drugs either as prescription or nonprescription, but the agency is considering adding a third class of drugs called "safe use" drugs, which would be regulated much as over-the-counter drugs are now, but with extra controls.

"The AAFP recognizes the important role of pharmacists in the provision of high quality healthcare; however, this proposed new paradigm would allow patients to receive powerful prescription drugs without the input of a physician," Roland Goertz, MD, chairman of AAFP board, wrote in an April 30 letter to FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg.

In a notice published in February, the FDA said it is considering a "new paradigm" where drugs that would normally require a prescription could be available without one if they met certain "conditions of safe use."

Those conditions could include restricting them to sale behind the counter at a pharmacy, or requiring an initial prescription but allowing refills at the patient's request.

Examples cited by Janet Woodcock, head of the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, might be EpiPens or glucagon -- both of which are prescribed for possibly life-threatening conditions and which patients can easily find themselves without when they're needed.

Moving some prescription drugs into safe use status could allow patients to skip visits to the doctor, which the AAFP opposes.

"Only licensed doctors of medicine, osteopathy, dentistry, and podiatry have the statutory authority to prescribe drugs ... . Allowing the pharmacist authority to dispense medication without consulting with the patient's physician first could seriously compromise the physician's ability to coordinate the care of multiple problems of many patients," Goertz wrote in the letter to Hamburg.

In March, the FDA held a public meeting on its proposed plan and heard from stakeholders such as the AAFP, the AMA, which is also opposed to the safe use category, and the American Pharmacists Association (APhA), which is in favor of adding this third category of drugs.

Thomas Menighan, CEO of the APhA, said creating a safe use category could greatly improve access to drugs because pharmacists are the most easily accessed healthcare provider for many patients.

In addition to improving access for patients, reducing routine doctor's visits could free up physicians to spend more time with sicker patients, "reduce the burdens on the already overburdened healthcare system, and reduce healthcare costs," the February FDA notice read.

When nicotine replacement therapy changed from requiring a prescription to being over-the-counter, tens of thousands of people quit smoking, which represented a $2 billion annual "societal benefit," Scott Melville, CEO of the Consumer Healthcare Products Association, a trade group for over-the-counter drugmakers, said during the FDA's public meeting.

In addition, making heartburn medicines available without a prescription saves the healthcare system $757 million each year, according to Melville.

In order for the FDA to consider switching a drug from prescription to nonprescription, it must meet certain criteria, including that it must not be addictive; it must not have significant toxicity if overdosed; and users must be able to self-diagnose conditions for appropriate use and be able to safely take the medication without a physician's screening.

Presumably some of those same requirements would apply to drugs moved from prescription status to the new safe use status.

During the March public meeting, an ob/gyn argued that birth control pills -- especially progestin-only pills -- meet those criteria and should be available without a prescription.

The FDA is seeking comments on the proposal.

--

My take? We have more drug training than physicians. It's all about the $.

The Top 10 iPad Apps for Pharmacists

Want to know the top 10 apps I use in pharmacy practice?

1. MedCalc Pro - is a medical calculator that gives you easy access to complicated medical formulas, scores, scales and classifications.MedCalc has been available on mobile platforms for more than a decade, so it leverages years of experience in bringing medical equations to physicians in an easy to use, yet very powerful format. The Pro version offers premium features such as native iPad support, a patient database to store results and many ways to export results (email, airprint, copy to clipboard). If you're on a tight budget, you can always check out the cheaper but still amazing MedCalc.

2. Sanford Guide - The Sanford Guide is the essential resource for healthcare professionals who care for patients with infectious diseases. The Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy 2011 application provides fast, convenient access to critical information on treatment of infectious diseases, for timely, effective decisions at the point of care. Always a pocket guide, still a pocket guide. Portability has been a hallmark of The Sanford Guide for over 40 years. The Sanford Guide to Antimicrobial Therapy 2011 application extends that portability to iOS4 devices: iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad. The most trusted infectious diseases treatment resource in print now presents the same comprehensive, treatment- focused coverage of infectious diseases and clinical conditions, anti-infective drug information, therapeutic adjuncts and comparative spectra of activity in a clean, uncluttered, device-optimized interface. Based on the Sanford Guide Web Edition, the application features expanded coverage of topics compared to the print edition.

3. Medscape - The #1 free medical app in iTunes containing drug reference, daily medical news, CME/CE, drug interaction checker, disease and condition reference, procedure and protocols, and other special features. A must!

4. MedPage - MedPage Today is the only service for physicians that provides a clinical perspective on the breaking medical news that their patients are reading. Co-developed by MedPage Today and The University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Office of Continuing Medical Education, each article alerts clinicians to breaking medical news, with summaries and actionable information enabling them to better understand the implications.

5. WebMD - WebMD helps you with your decision-making and health improvement efforts by providing mobile access 24/7 to mobile-optimized health information and decision-support tools including WebMD’s Symptom Checker, Drugs & Treatments, First Aid Information and Local Health Listings. WebMD also gives you access to first aid information without having to be connected wirelessly – critical if you don’t have Internet access in the time of need. Personalize your app by saving drugs, conditions and articles relevant to you — through secure access and easy sign-in.

6. Epocrates - Get quick access to reliable drug, disease, and diagnostic information at the point of care. Epocrates is the #1 mobile drug reference among U.S. physicians. Trusted for accurate content and innovative offerings, 50% of U.S. physicians rely on Epocrates to help improve patient safety and increase practice efficiency.

7. Lexicomp - Committed to improving medication safety with innovative products and technology designed for healthcare professionals, Lexicomp offers a variety of drug information and medical applications for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch. These applications are tailored to meet the point-of-care needs of pharmacists, physicians, nurses, nurse practitioners and dentists by storing content directly on the mobile device. Access to Lexicomp's up-to-date drug information and clinical content is a must for the busy healthcare professional who desires the necessary tools to make important medication and clinical decisions from the palm of their hand! Download your Lexicomp mobile drug information application on the app store.

8. Redi-Reader – the reader I use to read articles, studies, etc…

9. Pharmacy Times – Keeping up with pharmacy news. I choose this app.

10. PACID - Last, but certainly not least, ID Compendium, A Persiflager's Guide by Mark Crislip, MD and programming by Walter Crittenden, PharmD (shout out to the PharmD!). This app is sweet for infectious disease!

p.s. I saved the best for last ;)

Pharmacy Perfection

One of the biggest things I struggle with as a pharmacist is the idea of a profession that requires absolute perfection in everything you do; yet I am human. There is not a lot of room for error because it can detrimentally affect a patient. I remember back when I was as green as the spring grass freshly graduated from pharmacy school in 1999. I landed my first job with K-Mart, not exactly the job that I had dreamed of while I was attending pharmacy school, but they paid for my relocation from one city to another. They also did not do a lot of volume in the particular store where I was assigned. I do not remember the name of the pharmacist that worked there opposite from me initially. What I do remember about her is the words that came out of her mouth almost at her introduction, “I have never made an error while being a pharmacist.” I was too naïve at the time to realize that there was no way she was telling the truth. We are human; we will make mistakes. And at the time K-Mart did not have any mandates in place on flow or any bar-coding scanning to ensure more safety as Walgreens and CVS had. They were way behind the times as far as technological advances go.

I believe one of my first errors was dispensing Adalat CC 30 mg when the prescriptions called for 60 mg. Yes, I felt SICK. But over time I have come to realize that there are things you can do as a pharmacist to be more accurate whether it be hospital, retail, or anything in between.

According to a 2006 report by the Institute of Medicine, medication errors cause harm to roughly 1.5 million patients annually.5 Millions more are caught prior to administration, before they reach the patient. Not only do medication errors adversely impact the patient population, they are estimated to cost billions of dollars in additional treatment costs. Read more: http://www.uspharmacist.com/content/c/31431/

Here are some tips to help you become more accurate

1. Concentrate. Don’t allow distractions to stop your flow of thinking. If a technician comes up to you and needs something right away, go ahead, but realize when you start back on the order, you need to continue the exact same flow from beginning to end. Don’t try to “pick up where you left off.”

2. Do the same thing every single time. Consistency.

3. Do a second double check after you are finished checking. If that means pulling up the profile on the computer screen and holding up the order or pulling it back up electronically, just double check at the very end.

4. Any time you are going outside the usual, there is a higher incidence for errors. For example, if you have to build something from scratch in the computer on a new medication, you can be sure you are more likely to mess up on something else within the order than normal.

5. If you work retail, utilize every program they have to improve accuracy. In the hospital, just do another last review of MAR prior to moving to the next order. If in doubt; ask. It’s always better to phone the office if you work in retail or phone the nurse if you work in hospital to bounce off what you are seeing.

The most important thing is to make sure you have enough staff to safely fill medications and orders.

Pharmacy and Your Niche

What led you to choose pharmacy as a career? For me, it was a mention of "oh by the way, I am not only a chemistry advisor, I am a pre-pharmacy advisor" by a brilliant analytic chemistry professor, Dr. Anthony Harmon. I was just 21 years old, and I did not know what I wanted to be when I grew up. He pointed me toward pharmacy. I envied the quiet genius a lot of the serious chemistry majors seemed to possess. I was a more outgoing having fun type. Dr. Harmon told me a career in a chemistry lab may not mesh well with my personality. Well, let's be real... I wasn't an A student in his quantitative analysis class either. Pharmacy was suddenly on my radar.

I took the PCAT. Who knows what I made. My undergrad GPA was 3.2. Being female used to be a minority, but not in pharmacy in 1993. In fact at the time, being male was the minority. I was finishing my third year of undergrad and decided I'd apply to a handful of universities.

I had a couple of acceptances but really wanted the University of Tennessee at Memphis. I was told on the phone I was 99.9% in, so go ahead and respond decline to the private universities who accepted you. I turned down the schools and then received a rejection letter from UT. Guess i was that 0.1% eluded by the assistant dean. Talk about a downer. A lot of students do go the political route and a lot of acceptances are based on who you know, but I didn't until the rejection.

I reached out to some "who you know" types with my story and got accepted for the next year. So... I spent my fourth year in undergrad finishing a degree and biding my time. At least I did not have to reapply.

So there you have it. I remember thinking the pharmacist who worked in my small hometown had a large house. I didn't realize it wasn't pharmacy more than the sheer fact he had his own business. This is key.

Thirteen years later I realize you can make a good living in pharmacy or a great one in finding your niche within.

Have you found your niche?

The Most Hilarious (and not-so-hilarious-moments) in the Past 10+ Years of Pharmacy

This post has been long time in the making, and also a move toward a coming out of sorts for the Blonde Pharmacist.  It is time to just be me, if you know what I mean, so let's start out with a post about the past.  The most hilarious moments in the past 10 years of being a pharmacist (and not-so-hilarious-moments). 1.  Sometime during 1999, Keith Urban was living in the middle Tennessee area where I was working.  He wasn't a bit name at all, and in fact, in the Country Music City to make it.  (Make it, he did).  I worked in a small retail pharmacy with a fabulous technician named Kim and another pharmacist named Ladona.  Keith came in from time to time with his fabulous Australian accent.  Of course, I cannot divulge what he took medication wise, but I can say that he is indeed short, and was friendly.  It wasn't too much longer he sent in a driver...  he made it big.  This is a hilarious moment only because it was my only brush with celebrity while working.  Fun stuff.

2.  I was a floater for the same retail company and was working in a store one afternoon.  The best part of being a floater is that there isn't a lot of responsibility as far as the operations part of the day.  I would go in, do my job, and leave.  However, this one day, there was a man that came in holding what looked like a five year old needing an early refill on his son's albuterol nebules.  I told him he'd have to pay for them because TennCare wouldn't cover them early.  He was irate and began squeezing his son.  "Daddy!  You're squeezing me.  You're hurting me!"  He replied to his son rather dramatically, "Son, I'm not hurting you, SHE is!!"  As a twenty-something pharmacist, I sort of lost it at that moment.  "What am I doing a jedi mind trick on your son?"  It wasn't long after that, I knew retail wasn't for me.  I couldn't let it roll. I kept going with him, "I'm gonna have your job!"  He said angrily.  "You can have it!"  I replied.

If I can give some advice here it would be... learn to let it roll.  Don't lose your cool.

3.  JB.  The HIV positive homeless man that threatened to have my brains on the parking lot if I didn't fill his alprazolam 2 mg QID two weeks early.  Needless to say I didn't, and he was my last straw.  Good-bye retail forever.  I figured JB didn't really have much to lose.

4.  AG the former crack addict who kicked the habit for many many years only to die after shooting up again.  Some of the conversations we had were priceless in hindsight during a time I needed friends so desperately.

5.  Not a hilarious moment or not - but a moment where this blonde pharmacist worked for THE BLONDE pharmacist.  She was such a positive influence and hired me for home infusion with no experience.  Glad she gave me a chance.

6.  Who could forget the boss I had once who wanted to know what I was thinking once during a meeting.  The guy had more degrees than anyone I've met but yet asked the strangest questions.  My response, "Last time I checked, thoughts were still private property."  LOL  Seriously though, he sort of lost cred with me when a close friend and coworker was in labor and he stalled her for awhile to wrap up some things with her job and then took time later to brag about how he stalled her while she was in labor.  Gag.

7.  Who could forget the manager who threatened a punitive write-up in one sentence and the next began talking about Jesus.  Asked me if I had found a church.  So wrong on so many levels.

8.  Or the job interview where the pharmacy manager dove right in with the first sentence, "We'll begin our interview."  The next sentence, "Do you have kids?"

What are your most hilarious and not-so-hilarious moments in pharmacy?

How to Be a Better Pharmacist

Don't you remember graduating pharmacy school with all the hope in the world? Pseudomonas treatment options were on the tip of your tongue, and all those "older" pharmacists, let's face it, are SO behind the times. You knew it all, or so you thought at least. Confidence? Maybe so, or maybe an over inflated ego. If you attended a clinical type pharmacy school as I did, the idea of working retail was frowned upon. You were considered to be selling out. (I sold out... At first).

1. You absolutely must keep up year to year. Your education does not end the day you graduate. There's the boards, passing the state exam, and keeping up with continuing education. That window of time between what's printed and accepted by all to the newest guidelines should be studied. Know where to search. Be a google pro.

2. Consider challenging yourself with becoming board certified. If you fail the first time, take it again.

3. Be a team player. If you are clinical, work hard to treat dispensing pharmacists the way you would want to be treated and vice versa. The best model would be for most pharmacists in a department to be clinically trained.

4. Be tech savvy. Most health calculators are online or you can buy apps to help. I still can't believe the company I work for isn't 100% paperless. It's coming, and I can't wait.

Keep up... Because it won't be long, and you will see new graduates flooding the market, and you will recognize them eyeing you as one of the older pharmacists!

Management 101

Why is it more important for pharmacy schools to teach pharmacotherapy and kinetics but avoid teaching management? While it is important to understand how a reaction between Bactrim and warfarin will change previous outcome, isn't it equally important that a pharmacist manager knows how to manage? I spent hours memorizing classes of drugs but never once learned the rules of being an employee or a manager. I thought I'd go over those now... 1. A good manager communicates well. He not only communicates thoroughly and succintely in email, he will pick up the phone to schedule the more serious things. Emails and text messages should only be used for short messages. Anything serious in nature should require a phone call.

2. A good manager will not under any circumstances make promises that can't be delivered. Not only does this build distrust, it also gives an employee something to bitch about.

3. A good manager would never ask an employee to write up or monitor their peer. Again, mistrust.

4. A good manager thinks about how decisions affect their employees. If the employee is going to be deeply affected, a personal touch with explanation is probably the way to go.

5. A good manager doesn't keep the riff raff around to use for all the crap jobs.

6. A good manager isn't a manager obsessed with punitive action.

7. Remember positive feedback is more important than you think!

These are just a few of the tips I'd highly recommend a pharmacist manager begin with learning. Be fair, trustworthy, and logical. Care about your employees. Call them rather than blasting off an instant message or email. Don't accuse them for lack of communicating when all of your communications are short sentence fragments via email.

Walk the walk.... don't just talk the talk!

The Ideal Pharmacist

In a perfect medical world, solely by my own opinion, the ideal pharmacist would do a lot more than he/she does now. In fact, what we do now, based on the current education and training, doesn't even TOUCH what we really know. Pharmacology. Pharmacokinetics. We are experts. Physicians know diagnosing... treatment can sometimes be just what is memorized and recited to them by the latest pharmaceutical rep. So here I go... In a perfect medical world, a patient would go to the physician looking to find out what is wrong with them. The physician would run his/her tests, question the patient, and do their normal diagnostic research. Bingo. Diagnosis is given... "high blood pressure." The physician would write down this diagnosis on his pad and then pass the info along (or electronically - hey it's 2011!) to the pharmacist that is also in their office working. The pharmacist would consult with the physician immediately concerning the diagnosis and best possible drug choice based on the patient rather than what the Eli Lilly rep brought last week.

The patient would drive to the retail pharmacy he/she chose based on what is covered or who they prefer and pick up their med.

Why is there a gap in care? Why does a physician diagnose AND prescribe alone?

I've never agreed with this model and never will. Checks and balances folks... checks and balances.

Discuss.