Thursday, June 24, 2010

New Study: Many US States Neglect Setting Any Telepharmacy Policy

In a new study in the American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy (AJHP), the "Current practices and state regulations regarding telepharmacy in rural hospitals" were examined for a good number of US states. Through a series of interviews with board of pharmacy directors, a team out of the University of Minnesota including Michelle Casey, Todd Sorensen, Walter Elias, Alana Knudson, and Walter Gregg found:

Results. Although telepharmacy is addressed in NABP’s model pharmacy practice act, many state boards are just beginning to address it. The model act addresses the practice of pharmacy across state lines, and the state board directors interviewed generally agreed that pharmacists should be licensed in the state where they are providing the service. States differed on whether a pharmacist should be required to be physically located in a licensed pharmacy and how much time the pharmacist should have to spend onsite. Telepharmacy models being implemented in hospitals in several states incorporate long-distance supervision of pharmacy technicians by pharmacists. The models being implemented vary according to area, state regulations, hospital ownership, and hospital size and medication order volume. Most hospitals reported that they track medication error rates, and some said error rates have improved since telepharmacy implementation.

Conclusion. The application of telepharmacy in rural hospitals varies across the United States but is not widespread, and many states have not defined regulations for telepharmacy in hospitals.

1 comment:

John O. said...

Here is a copy of the full paper: http://www.baxa.com/resources/docs/research/AJHPCurrentStateRegulationsforTelepharmacyJuly2010.pdf