Abstract

BackgroundA medication safety review (MSR) is a novel, pharmacist-driven, technology-supported intervention that prioritizes adverse drug event risk mitigation. Previous research has shown that Medicare Part D beneficiaries who received MSRs in an enhanced medication therapy management (EMTM) model realized improvements in total Medicare spending, hospitalizations, emergency department (ED) visits, and mortality compared to control. However, it is unknown whether beneficiaries implemented pharmacists’ MSR recommendations. ObjectiveThe objective of the study was to evaluate whether MSR recommendation implementation is associated with improvements in these same outcomes for Part D beneficiaries enrolled in EMTM compared to a control group. MethodsThis retrospective, pre-post, cohort study evaluated outcomes for beneficiaries who were targeted for MSR services in 2018 and 2019. The “validated implementation MSR (viMSR)” cohort included those who received their first-ever MSR in 2018, received another MSR in 2019, and validated implementation of ≥1 recommendation in their 2018 MSR. The “failed to engage” (FTE) cohort included beneficiaries who were targeted for MSR services in both 2018 and 2019 but did not engage in an MSR at any point through the end of 2019. For both cohorts, we calculated the 2018-to-2019 change for each outcome and then determined whether year-over-year changes differed significantly between cohorts. For mortality, we relaxed the requirement for continuous enrollment in 2019, permitting us to compare the proportion of beneficiaries that died in each group in 2019. Analyses were adjusted for baseline multimorbidity. ResultsOf 4384 beneficiaries who completed MSRs, 602 (13.7%) implemented ≥1 recommendation. The viMSR cohort (N = 602) outperformed the FTE cohort (N = 7052) in total Medicare costs ($2162/y lower; P = 0.020), Part A Medicare costs ($1855/y; P = 0.024), hospitalizations (9.1 fewer admissions/100 beneficiaries/y, P = 0.020), ED visits (10.8 fewer visits/100 beneficiaries/y, P = 0.014), and mortality (3.8% fewer died in 2019; P < 0.001). ConclusionImplementing pharmacists’ recommendations in MSRs was associated with improved health care resource utilization and mortality for MSR-eligible beneficiaries.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call