Reducing Emergency Room Visits Among Patients With Diabetes by Embedding Clinical Pharmacists in the Primary Care Teams.

2021 
Background Pharmacists are effective at improving control of cardiovascular risk factors, but it less clear whether these improvements translate into less emergency room (ER) use and fewer hospitalizations. The UCMyRx program embed pharmacists in primary care. Objective The objective of this study was to examine if the integration of pharmacists into primary care was associated with lower ER and hospital use for patients with diabetes. Design This was a quasi-experimental study with a comparator group. Subjects The analytic sample included patients with diabetes with uncontrolled cardiovascular risk factors (A1C >9%, blood pressure >140/90 mm Hg, low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol >130 mg/dL) who had 1 or more visits in either a UCMyRx (648 patients, 14 practices) or usual care practice (1944 patients, 14 practices). Measures Our outcomes were ER and hospitalization rates as measured before and after the consultations between UCMyRx and usual care. Our predictor variable was the pharmacist consultation. Poisson generalized estimating equations model was used to estimate the adjusted predicted change in utilization before and after the pharmacist consultation. The Average Treatment Effect on the Treated was estimated. Results In models adjusted, the adjusted mean predicted number of emergency department visits/month during the year before the consultation was 0.09 among UCMyRx patients. During the year after initiating the care with the pharmacists, this rate decreased to an adjusted mean monthly rate of 0.07, with an Average Treatment Effect on the Treated=0.021 (P=0.035), a predicted reduction of 21% in emergency department visits associated with the clinical pharmacist consults. There was a nonsignificant predicted 3.2% reduction in hospitalizations over time for patients in the UCMyRx program. Conclusion Clinical pharmacists are an important addition to clinical care teams in primary care practices and significantly decreased utilization of the ER among patients with poorly controlled diabetes.
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