Abstract

BackgroundThe pressure on healthcare services worldwide has driven the incorporation of disease state management services within community pharmacies in developed countries. Pharmacists are recognised as the most accessible healthcare professionals, and the incorporation of these services facilitates patient care. In Australia, the opportunity to manage pharmacy patients with mental illness has been underutilised, despite the existence of service models for other chronic conditions. This paper is an independent evaluation of a novel service developed by a community pharmacy in Perth, Western Australia. The service represents collaboration between a nurse practitioner and community pharmacy staff in the management of mental health patients with metabolic risks.MethodsWe applied practice service standards for Australian community pharmacies to develop an evaluation framework for this novel service. This was followed by semi-structured interviews with staff members at the study pharmacy to explore service processes and procedures. Descriptive analysis of interviews was supplemented with analysis of patients’ biometric data. All data were evaluated against the developed framework.ResultsThe evaluation framework comprised 13 process, 5 outcomes, and 11 quality indicators. Interview data from eight staff members and biometric data from 20 community-dwelling mental health patients taking antipsychotics were evaluated against the framework. Predominantly, patients were managed by the pharmacy’s nurse practitioner, with medication management provided by pharmacists. Patients’ biometric measurements comprised weight, blood pressure, blood glucose levels, lipid profiles and management of obesity, smoking, hypertension and diabetes. Positive outcomes observed in the patient data included weight loss, smoking cessation, and improved blood pressure, blood glucose and lipid levels.ConclusionsThe developed framework allowed effective evaluation of the service, and may be applicable to other pharmacy services. The metabolic clinic met key process, quality and outcomes indicators. The positive patient outcomes may assist in securing further funding.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12913-016-1406-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The pressure on healthcare services worldwide has driven the incorporation of disease state management services within community pharmacies in developed countries

  • The value of community pharmacy patient-centred disease-state management services has been evaluated in developed countries, with evidence of facilitated patient care and positive

  • The Australian Government has supported trials of disease state management services that promote a role for pharmacists in the management of chronic conditions such as asthma [5], diabetes [6], hypertension [7] and weight management [8], collectively developing a Maulavizada et al BMC Health Services Research (2016) 16:146 service model for collaborative management of chronic conditions through pharmacies

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Summary

Introduction

The pressure on healthcare services worldwide has driven the incorporation of disease state management services within community pharmacies in developed countries. The Australian Government has supported trials of disease state management services that promote a role for pharmacists in the management of chronic conditions such as asthma [5], diabetes [6], hypertension [7] and weight management [8], collectively developing a Maulavizada et al BMC Health Services Research (2016) 16:146 service model for collaborative management of chronic conditions through pharmacies. Whilst these trials reported positive outcomes for patients’ health, commitment by participating pharmacists varied. The role may include, but is not limited to, referral of patients to other health professionals, prescribing of certain government-subsidised medications and ordering of pathology tests [9, 10]

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