Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Telepharmacy owes a lot to Sen. Dorgan

As dean of North Dakota State University’s pharmacy program and director of the North Dakota Telepharmacy Project, I was pleased to see the recent AP article published in The Forum on our telepharmacy program. This program is the first of its kind in the country, and it shows what North Dakota is capable of accomplishing when academia works together with rural communities and private businesses to achieve a common goal.

The purpose of the North Dakota Telepharmacy Project is to restore, retain or establish pharmacy services in medically underserved rural communities of North Dakota through the use of telepharmacy technology. Through this program, a licensed pharmacist at a central pharmacy site supervises a registered pharmacy technician at a remote telepharmacy site in the processing of prescriptions for patients. Currently 67 pharmacies are involved in the project – 22 central pharmacy sites and 45 remote telepharmacy sites. Of the 67 pharmacies involved, 44 are retail pharmacies and 23 are hospital pharmacies.

Twenty-nine (55 percent) of North Dakota’s 53 counties are involved in the project and two in Minnesota. Approximately 40,000 rural residents have had pharmacy services restored, retained or established through the North Dakota Telepharmacy Project since its inception in 2002. The project has restored valuable access to health care in remote medically underserved areas of the state and has added more than $12.5 million annually in economic development to the local rural economy.

The only thing missing in this article was acknowledgment of the important role Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., played in making this program possible. Through Dorgan’s efforts on the Senate Appropriations Committee, he helped provide more than $3.3 million in federal support to NDSU to ensure that this program became a reality.

I can honesty say that North Dakota would not have this nation-leading telepharmacy program today without Dorgan’s help. Considering the impact this program has had locally, regionally and nationally, I believe Dorgan deserves some credit and recognition for his efforts regarding this terrific program.

Source

Info on Author: Charles D. Peterson, Pharm.D., Dean, Professor, and Principal Investigator
North Dakota State University College of Pharmacy, Nursing, and Allied Sciences
Info on Dorgan: http://www.votesmart.org/bio.php?can_id=53332

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