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HEALTH CARE Pharmacists become providers

Wednesday, September 29, 2004


Drugstores look to expand consultations -- and charge for them.
CAMP HILL, Pa. (AP) -- Jaime White helps her diabetes patients understand how to manage their blood sugar, checks their blood pressure, and sometimes even examines their feet for loss of sensation from nerve damage common to diabetes sufferers.
Her patients are West Virginia state employees participating in a program offered by Camp Hill-based Rite Aid Corp., the nation's third-largest drugstore chain. They meet with White at one of two drugstores, and their insurer pays the bills: $80 for initial visits, $20 for follow-ups.
Pharmacists like White have long been called on by customers to do more than just fill prescriptions. But drugstores, from giants like Rite Aid to smaller regional chains, are looking to expand their counseling programs and boost revenue -- a trend that could be bolstered by the prescription-drug benefit that will become available to Medicare enrollees in 2006.
"Many of [the chains] have started to look at how they can transform a pharmacy from a place where one can obtain drugs into a place where you deliver health care," said John M. Coster, vice president of policy and programs for the National Association of Chain Drug Stores.
The chains say that regular patient consultations help patients stay healthier because many patients don't take their medication correctly. As a result, they say, both patients and insurers will save money.
Getting reimbursed
But to provide a pharmacists' time and private rooms for the consultations, stores need to be reimbursed by insurers, as in White's program, the companies say.
The hurdle is getting insurers to agree to the reimbursements. Such reimbursement is common for pharmacists who work in nursing homes, but nowhere else, those in the industry say.
Under the law President Bush signed in December, insurers providing Medicare drug plans must provide a medication consulting service for patients whose illnesses and prescription use meet certain thresholds.
The federal government has not finalized how the consulting programs will work, and there are conflicting ideas over the shape of final regulations.
Drugstores and pharmacist groups want retail pharmacies to play a significant role. Insurers generally support the idea of pharmacist checkups, but want more flexibility, such as telephone consultations.
The American Medical Association hasn't developed a stand on the issue. But a board member, Dr. Edward Langston, of Lafayette, Ind., cautioned that Medicare is a "zero sum game" and that any new program that is reimbursed will draw money from other programs.
He also said consultations should be subject to oversight and evaluation.
Patient
Bill Wilmer, 68, a retired city worker in Asheville, N.C., said his physician takes care of him when he has a problem, but his pharmacist is like a coach who works to keep him healthy.
Wilmer, who takes medication for diabetes, high cholesterol and congestive heart failure, has seen a Kerr Drug pharmacist a few times a year since the late 1990s through his insurer.
"I think I am far better off in the program with the pharmacist than on my own, trying to learn, hit or miss," Wilmer said.
Drugstores and pharmacist groups say the goal is to make the consultation programs available to everyone who takes medication, at least as a companion to traditional, over-the-counter advice.
"There will always be some advice that's provided with the dispensing and then there's the in-depth medication review, like, 'We really need to sit down and talk about your diabetes,'" said Susan C. Winckler, staff counsel for the American Pharmacists Association.