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Achieving Provider Status for Pharmacists

By Paul Abramowitz posted 01-02-2013 17:56

  
Achieving provider status under Section 1861 of the Social Security Act is important for the profession. It is essential to recognize pharmacists for the patient-care providers that they already are, along with other formally recognized providers, such as nurse practitioners, dietitians, psychologists, social workers, optometrists, nurse-midwives, dentists, and others.

The data are conclusive: pharmacists improve medication-use outcomes for patients when they are included on the patient-care team. A recent report by the Chief Pharmacy Officer of the United States Public Health Services makes a compelling case for using pharmacists more effectively in the care of patients. Therefore, a logical next step is making the services pharmacists provide eligible for recognition and payment by Medicare, Medicaid, and other third-party payers, including states and private health plans.

Pharmacists today are clinical practitioners who provide distinct direct patient-care services, serving as both pharmacy generalists and specialists. This fact is not in dispute. However, laws often lag far behind mainstream practice and technology. In today’s health care environment, where improving quality of care and decreasing costs are the focus of health care reform, there could not be a better time to recognize pharmacists as providers and as the medication-use experts on the interprofessional team.

Achieving provider status will not be easy. It will take a massive grassroots effort by individual pharmacy practitioners and affiliated state societies leading state-based coalitions. Federal legislators need to see, in their districts and states, pharmacists providing the patient-care services they seek for recognition and payment. Achieving provider status will also require a strong and cohesive national coalition of pharmacy organizations, consumer groups, and other health care organizations that understand the value pharmacists bring to the care of the American people.

During ASHP’s Legislative Day in September, ASHP members met with their representatives on Capitol Hill to discuss provider status, with the goal of setting the stage for a broad-based provider status campaign in 2013. Now and in the coming months the CEOs of the national pharmacy organizations are meeting to discuss how we can work together to pool our resources and collective energies to achieve success on this issue. I am absolutely certain that our organizations must work together to advocate for and achieve provider status. It is also important to recognize that achieving provider status will require a multi-year strategy that includes a strong and unwavering coalition at the state and national levels.

Stay tuned for updates on our progress on this top-priority strategic issue for ASHP. Please also start thinking about ways that you as future recognized providers are going to demonstrate to your elected officials in Washington, D.C., the great work you are doing to achieve optimal medication therapy outcomes for your patients and to decrease health care costs.

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01-06-2013 10:01

Here is one way to make our voices heard on this matter. Click on the link below to be taken to the White House petitions web page to sign the petition asking for pharmacists to be recognized with provider status. Thank you for your informative post, and hopefully with pharmacists and students working together this will be something we can achieve in the future.
http://wh.gov/Q7lq

01-04-2013 19:30

I strongly agree with Dr Abramowitz's statement, "Achieving provider status will also require a strong and cohesive national coalition of pharmacy organizations...." To date this has NOT happened and in fact, some national pharmacy organizatons have actively opposed previous attempts at achieving provider status for advanced practice pharmacists. I would hope that those pharmacy organizations that, in the past, have blocked attempts at achieving provider status, have arrived at a more enlightened viewpoint.