4.2 Editorial Material

Clinical pharmacist consultant in primary care settings in Slovenia focused on elderly patients on polypharmacy: successful national program from development to reimbursement

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACY
Volume 43, Issue 6, Pages 1722-1727

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11096-021-01306-2

Keywords

Clinical pharmacy; Development; Generalpractitioners; Primary care setting; Pharmaceutical services; Reimbursement; Slovenia

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This paper describes the development, implementation, and evaluation of a program in Slovenia that allows all general practitioners to refer patients to clinical pharmacists in primary care settings for a medication review. Including clinical pharmacists in primary care settings is particularly beneficial for patients with multiple diseases and medications, who are often elderly people.
Clinical pharmacists in most primary care settings across Europe do not offer a reimbursed medication review service. This paper describes the development, implementation, and evaluation of a program in Slovenia that allows all general practitioners to refer patients to clinical pharmacists in primary care settings for a medication review. Between 2012 and 2015, the Health Insurance Institute of Slovenia proposed, funded and evaluated a pilot trial and recommended that the service be extended to all public health insurance beneficiaries in Slovenia. Following successful negotiations, the program (Pharmacist Consultant) has been available in all Slovenian primary care settings since 2018. It was evaluated internally with various questionnaires and externally with three studies that reported fewer medication-related problems, fewer drug-drug interactions, cost effectiveness, better treatment guidelines adherence and better humanistic clinical outcomes. The results demonstrate that including clinical pharmacists in primary care settings is particularly beneficial for patients with multiple diseases and medications, who are often elderly people. Future research should examine the service with improved methodologies (e.g., prospective studies with a larger sample size, measures of clinical outcomes and long-term follow-up). In the context of Slovenia, studies should also examine the effects of further integration of clinical pharmacists in patient care (e.g., through patient monitoring, dependent or independent prescribing and medication reviews in hospitals).

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