Publication | Open Access
Impact of Appointment-Based Medication Synchronization on Proportion of Days Covered for Chronic Medications
21
Citations
11
References
2018
Year
Family MedicineProgram ImplementationPharmacotherapyPrimary CarePharmaceutical PracticeClinical PharmacyDrug MonitoringManaged CarePublic HealthMedication ManagementHealth Services ResearchChronic MedicationsPharmaceutical CareHealth PolicyCms Star RatingHealth ReimbursementHealth Information TechnologyDrug Information SystemHealth Care ReimbursementPatient SafetyDays CoveredAbms ProgramMedicinePharmacoepidemiologyAppointment-based Medication Synchronization
Appointment-based medication synchronization (ABMS) programs have been associated with increased adherence and persistence to chronic medications. Adherence to statin therapy, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs), angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs), and non-insulin antidiabetic medications (NIDM) are used to determine a health plan's Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Star Rating under a pay-for-performance model. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of implementing an ABMS program on overall pharmacy adherence measures for statins, ACEI/ARBs, and NIDM, as presented through the Electronic Quality Improvement Platform for Plans and Pharmacies (EQuIPP©) platform. This retrospective, pre-post ABMS program study evaluated EQuIPP© generated adherence performance measures, represented as proportion of days covered (PDC), 6-months before and 6- and 12-months after the ABMS service for statin therapy, ACEIs/ARBs, and NIDM. All adherence measures showed statistically significant improvement in PDC percentage post ABMS implementation, except for NIDM percentage in 6-months post-ABMS service. This study shows that a comprehensive medication synchronization program can enhance adherence measures that are important to health plans to increase CMS Star Rating under a pay-for-performance model.
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