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MentorVIEW
A shorter distance between two points
Bill
Smith's illustrious career has included
major contributions to the Pharmacy
profession, both in management and
clinical practice.
As a
Harvey A.K.Whitney Lecture Award
recipient, Smith has earned Health-system
Pharmacy's highest honor. In our 2002
MentorVIEW with Bill, he observed that
Pharmacy was still "struggling to try
to identify what its core purpose or
mission is. We continue to be dominated by
the dispensing function ...," he
said. Five
years later, Smith still
feels that Pharmacists need a more clear
picture of their role(s) in
healthcare. Here, we resumed our visit.
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"We
are responsible
for
the care of patients. Not
everybody can do great things, but
we can do little things in a
great way, every day." |
Bill
Smith
PharmD, PhD
Professor
VCU
|
PN:
What problems are you seeing
in Pharmacy,
today?
Bill: First, there
are many positives in Pharmacy that I see.
As for negatives, the list may be short
... but is significant. We're still
fighting the 3rd party payer system. But the
bigger issue is we as yet haven't defined
clearly -- to ourselves, healthcare, or
patients -- what we are all about. There
are still too many people being damaged by
medication errors.
PN:
What promising signs do you see?
Bill: I'm encouraged by the development of
measures
that illustrate Pharmacy's performance,
like what is coming out of AHRQ (Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality;
website is www.ahrq.gov). This is a
real plus. We've been recognized that we
have a clinical role to play. I
also feel that the opportunities with
Medicare Part D are exciting (www.medicare-partd.com).
Though I'm not sure where this funding
will come from. There is much acceptance
for Pharmacists in clinical practice.
Particularly in chains. We've simply got
to think differently as a profession, and
get active in promoting our roles in
clinical practice.
PN:
You mentioned AHRQ. Are you satisfied with
"best practice" benchmarks for
Pharmacy quality and performance?
Bill: My main problem with benchmarking is
this: there is no science behind it. Most
hospitals are doing comparative data using
statistics from all hospitals. This is
very arbitrary. It's just numbers.
Pharmacy is more impacted by its
facilities than any other healthcare area.
If there is a poor internal location for
a
Pharmacy, it will affect that
Pharmacy horribly. The profession has never come to grips with this;
and yet
everybody wants their orders filled now.
That's a tremendous strain on a Pharmacy Department.
PN:
Is there a need to change Pharmacy
practice, somehow, to better underscore
the value Pharmacists bring to healthcare?
Bill:
I hear this often, and I ask this question
in reply. Why is there a need to
change? Our challenge is unchanging: to resolve patients' drug-related
issues. We have to keep shifting the focus
on the cost of our services, and our impact on the overall quality of care
a
patient receives. John P. Kotter at the
Harvard Business School has done terrific
research on change (dor.hbs.edu),
which
could help us in this conversation.
PN:
You've been a Pharmacist for over 40
years. You're a professor at VCU. What is
your take on the next generation of
Pharmacists?
Bill: They are extremely talented, as Ron
Cameron (www.temp-pharmacist.com; Ron
Cameron) recently said in his
MentorVIEW. They can make a difference in
patient care. I also
suspect too many new Pharmacists see $$
signs. There is a great need in Community
Pharmacy to offer clinical therapy for
patients, and to meet the needs of other
people. I can't answer if the Pharm.D. is
attracting a better student ... but they are very good.
PN:
What final thoughts do you have for our
young Pharmacist, and other Pharmacist and
Technician readers?
Bill: Recognize that you have a
responsibility to take care of patients.
Not everybody can do great things, but
people can do little things in a great way
every day. If they do this ... they'll be
fine.
MentorVIEW
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