Advancing Community Pharmacy Practice – A Technician Product Verification Pilot to Optimize Care

Elevating the technical role of pharmacy technicians to perform Technician Product Verification (TPV) is one strategy that has shown promise to optimize pharmacy practice models. This is done by better positioning pharmacists to provide clinical care, in line with their education and expertise. TPV...

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Main Authors: Michael Andreski, Erica Martin, Victoria Valentine Brouner, Sarah Sorum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing 2020-06-01
Series:INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/2340
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spelling doaj-07d4e96ede8d488c9c94842cef1aeaac2020-11-25T03:34:55ZengUniversity of Minnesota Libraries PublishingINNOVATIONS in Pharmacy2155-04172020-06-0111210.24926/iip.v11i2.2340Advancing Community Pharmacy Practice – A Technician Product Verification Pilot to Optimize CareMichael Andreski0Erica Martin1Victoria Valentine Brouner2Sarah Sorum3Drake University College of Pharmacy and Health SciencesPharmacy Society of WisconsinConcordia University Wisconsin School of PharmacyPharmacy Society of Wisconsin Elevating the technical role of pharmacy technicians to perform Technician Product Verification (TPV) is one strategy that has shown promise to optimize pharmacy practice models. This is done by better positioning pharmacists to provide clinical care, in line with their education and expertise. TPV permits a Validated Pharmacy Technician, as defined by the Wisconsin Pharmacy Examining Board, to verify the accuracy of a product filled by another technician. The pharmacist maintains responsibility for assessing the clinical appropriateness of the prescription, including drug utilization review, data entry, and patient counseling.  During the study period, 12,891 pharmacist-verified prescriptions (baseline) and 27,447 Validated Pharmacy Technician-verified prescriptions were audited for accuracy. The aggregate verification error rate for pharmacist-verified prescriptions was 0.16% and 0.01% for Validated Pharmacy Technician-verified prescriptions. The mean error rate was significantly less for Validated Pharmacy Technician-verified prescriptions than for pharmacist-verified prescriptions (0.19 ± 0.174 % vs 0.03 ± 0.089 %, p=0.020) (Figure 3). This suggests TPV in the community pharmacy setting maintained patient safety. In this study, Validated Pharmacy Technicians were shown to be more accurate than pharmacists at performing product verification. The ability to delegate the product verification task holds the potential to free up pharmacist time for increased direct patient care. Increasing direct patient care by pharmacists in community pharmacies may have significant implications for improving patient outcomes and pharmacy quality.   Article Type: Original Research https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/2340Technician Product Verification; Product Verification; Delegate-Check-Delegate; Tech-Check-Tech; Optimizing Care; Pharmacy Care; Community Pharmacy; Pharmacy Technician
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Andreski
Erica Martin
Victoria Valentine Brouner
Sarah Sorum
spellingShingle Michael Andreski
Erica Martin
Victoria Valentine Brouner
Sarah Sorum
Advancing Community Pharmacy Practice – A Technician Product Verification Pilot to Optimize Care
INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
Technician Product Verification; Product Verification; Delegate-Check-Delegate; Tech-Check-Tech; Optimizing Care; Pharmacy Care; Community Pharmacy; Pharmacy Technician
author_facet Michael Andreski
Erica Martin
Victoria Valentine Brouner
Sarah Sorum
author_sort Michael Andreski
title Advancing Community Pharmacy Practice – A Technician Product Verification Pilot to Optimize Care
title_short Advancing Community Pharmacy Practice – A Technician Product Verification Pilot to Optimize Care
title_full Advancing Community Pharmacy Practice – A Technician Product Verification Pilot to Optimize Care
title_fullStr Advancing Community Pharmacy Practice – A Technician Product Verification Pilot to Optimize Care
title_full_unstemmed Advancing Community Pharmacy Practice – A Technician Product Verification Pilot to Optimize Care
title_sort advancing community pharmacy practice – a technician product verification pilot to optimize care
publisher University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
series INNOVATIONS in Pharmacy
issn 2155-0417
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Elevating the technical role of pharmacy technicians to perform Technician Product Verification (TPV) is one strategy that has shown promise to optimize pharmacy practice models. This is done by better positioning pharmacists to provide clinical care, in line with their education and expertise. TPV permits a Validated Pharmacy Technician, as defined by the Wisconsin Pharmacy Examining Board, to verify the accuracy of a product filled by another technician. The pharmacist maintains responsibility for assessing the clinical appropriateness of the prescription, including drug utilization review, data entry, and patient counseling.  During the study period, 12,891 pharmacist-verified prescriptions (baseline) and 27,447 Validated Pharmacy Technician-verified prescriptions were audited for accuracy. The aggregate verification error rate for pharmacist-verified prescriptions was 0.16% and 0.01% for Validated Pharmacy Technician-verified prescriptions. The mean error rate was significantly less for Validated Pharmacy Technician-verified prescriptions than for pharmacist-verified prescriptions (0.19 ± 0.174 % vs 0.03 ± 0.089 %, p=0.020) (Figure 3). This suggests TPV in the community pharmacy setting maintained patient safety. In this study, Validated Pharmacy Technicians were shown to be more accurate than pharmacists at performing product verification. The ability to delegate the product verification task holds the potential to free up pharmacist time for increased direct patient care. Increasing direct patient care by pharmacists in community pharmacies may have significant implications for improving patient outcomes and pharmacy quality.   Article Type: Original Research
topic Technician Product Verification; Product Verification; Delegate-Check-Delegate; Tech-Check-Tech; Optimizing Care; Pharmacy Care; Community Pharmacy; Pharmacy Technician
url https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/innovations/article/view/2340
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