Medication therapy management explained

Medication therapy management, generally called medicine use review in the United Kingdom, is a service provided typically by pharmacists, medical affairs, and RWE scientists that aims to improve outcomes by helping people to better understand their health conditions and the medications used to manage them.[1] This includes providing education on the disease state and medications used to treat the disease state, ensuring that medicines are taken correctly, reducing waste due to unused medicines, looking for any side effects, and providing education on how to manage any side effects.[2] The process that can be broken down into five steps: medication therapy review, personal medication record, medication-related action plan, intervention and or referral, and documentation and follow-up.

The medication therapy review has the pharmacist review all of the prescribed medications, any over the counter medications, and all dietary supplements an individual is taking. This allows the pharmacist to look for any duplications or dangerous drug interactions.[3] [4] This service can be especially valuable for people who are older, have several chronic conditions, take multiple medications, or are seen by multiple doctors.[5] [6] [7]

United States

In 2014, the US Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services required Part D plans to include an MTM program,[8] which led to an expansion of services offered.[9] MTM services are provided free to eligible patients enrolled in a plan. As of 2019, to be eligible a patient must have at least two (or three, for some plans) chronic conditions, take multiple drugs covered by Part D, and are predicted to exceed a preset amount in annual out of pocket costs for their covered Part D drugs (set at $3,967 in 2018 and $4,044 in 2019).[10] [11] Plans are permitted to expand MTM eligibility to patients not meeting the minimum required criteria if they so choose.

Comprehensive medication review

As part of the minimum required services, plans must provide for a comprehensive medication review (CMR) once per year, usually conducted by a pharmacist. Per CMS guidance, the goal of the CMR is to "improve patients’ knowledgeof their prescriptions, over-the-counter (OTC) medications, herbal therapies and dietary supplements, identify and address problems or concerns that patients may have, and empower patients to self manage their medications and their health conditions." The CMR is conducted in an interactive manner either in person or through telehealth. A pharmacist or other provider conducting a CMR will use information from various sources, such as the pharmacy fill records, the patient's pill bottles, a patient interview, and/or discussion with caregivers to identify potential improvements that can be made in the patient's therapy.[12] The pharmacist will then make any appropriate recommendations to the patient's doctor, as well as document their findings in a format similar to a SOAP note. The patient must be provided a medication action plan with a list of their medications, directions, and any steps they need to take to improve their therapy (such as using reminders, organizing, stopping old medications, etc). Most comprehensive medication reviews result in pharmacist intervention to recommend changes to therapy to a doctor, and/or recommendations to the patient to improve adherence/efficacy of their medications.[13] [14]

Targeted medication review

A targeted medication review (TMR, also called targeted intervention program or TIP) is a required service for eligible patients that focuses on a specific medication or disease state and is conducted once every three months. The goal of a TMR program is to improve adherence to medication and identify and fix drug therapy problems common in chronic diseases such as nonadherence, duplicate therapy, or sub-optimal therapy. The pharmacist or provider will contact the patient to ensure adherence, identify potential problems with the therapy, and make any appropriate recommendations to the prescriber. The provision of TMR services to patients with chronic diseases has been shown to decrease the number of inpatient admissions per 1000 patients by about 50 admissions per 1000 patients.

United Kingdom

A medicine use review (MUR) is an advanced service offered by pharmacies in the United Kingdom. It is part of the current contract pharmacies hold with the National Health Service (NHS). An MUR is an opportunity for patients to discuss their medicines with a qualified pharmacist. An MUR is a free NHS service that is held in a private consultation room at a local pharmacy. It is not meant to replace the role of the general practitioner but rather provide:

Pharmacies in the United kingdom are paid £28 for each Medicines Use Review undertaken, up to a maximum of 400 per pharmacy, per year. At least 70% of patients must be in one of the four target groups:

The introduction of pharmacists into GP surgeries means that the practice pharmacists can do more to ensure that reviews are carried out where necessary.[16]

Abuse of system

There have been concerns over abuse of the system, whereby multiple pharmacies are using the system to charge the £28 fee for each 10- to 15-minute MUR, and pressuring pharmacists to meet targets for the number carried out, with the review more of a tick-box exercise than a benefit for the patient. There have also been cases of falsification of figures.[17]

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Pharmacist-Led Medication Therapy Management Innovations . AHRQ Health Care Innovations Exchange . September 9, 2016 . en.
  2. Pellegrino . AN . Martin . MT . Tilton . JJ . Touchette . DR . Medication therapy management services: definitions and outcomes. . Drugs . 2009 . 69 . 4 . 393–406 . 10.2165/00003495-200969040-00001 . 19323584. 9433253 .
  3. Web site: Leadership for Medication Therapy Management Version 2.0. The American Pharmacists Association and The National Association of Chain Drug Stores Foundation. March 2008.
  4. Web site: Medication Therapy Management Services. American Pharmacists Association. en. November 20, 2018.
  5. Greer . N . Bolduc . J . Geurkink . E . Koeller . E . Rector . T . Olson . K . MacDonald . R . Wilt . TJ . October 2015 . 27252999. Pharmacist-Led Chronic Disease Management: A Systematic Review of Effectiveness and Harms Compared to Usual Care [Internet].. VA Evidence-based Synthesis Program Reports..
  6. Web site: Medication Therapy Management in Pharmacy Practice Version 2.0 . American Pharmacists Association and National Association of Chain Drug Stores Foundation. . March 2008.
  7. Web site: Community Pharmacists and Medication Therapy Management . Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . 21 July 2018 . en-us . 18 January 2018.
  8. Web site: CMS proposes requiring expansion of Part D MTM benefits. www.pharmacist.com. en. 2018-11-21.
  9. Book: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK294482/. Medication Therapy Management Interventions in Outpatient Settings . Executive Summary. Viswanathan. Meera. Kahwati. Leila C.. Golin. Carol E.. Blalock. Susan. Coker-Schwimmer. Emmanuel. Posey. Rachael. Lohr. Kathleen N.. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (US). 2014. en.
  10. Web site: Fact Sheet Summary of 2019 MTM Programs . Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
  11. Web site: Part D: Getting to Know Medication Therapy Management (MTM) . National Council on Aging.
  12. Ferries . Erin . Dye . Joseph T. . Hall . Benjamin . Ndehi . Lilian . Schwab . Phil . Vaccaro . Jamieson . Comparison of Medication Therapy Management Services and Their Effects on Health Care Utilization and Medication Adherence . Journal of Managed Care & Specialty Pharmacy . June 2019 . 25 . 6 . 688–695 . 10.18553/jmcp.2019.25.6.688. 31134865 . free . 10397886 .
  13. Rivera . Jasmine . Shcherbakova . Natalia . Vala . Christine . Capoccia . Kam . Community pharmacists' interventions and documentation during medication therapy management encounters delivered face-to-face versus via telephone: The devil is in the details . Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy . December 2019 . 16 . 10 . 1447–1451 . 10.1016/j.sapharm.2019.12.020. 31889640 . 209519586 .
  14. Pestka . Deborah L. . Zillich . Alan J. . Coe . Antoinette B. . Farris . Karen B. . Adeoye . Omolola A. . Snyder . Margie E. . Farley . Joel F. . Nationwide estimates of medication therapy management delivery under the Medicare prescription drug benefit . Journal of the American Pharmacists Association . May 2020 . 60 . 3 . 456–461 . 10.1016/j.japh.2019.12.002. 31926872 . 210166800 . 10478169 .
  15. Web site: Medicines Use Reviews (MURs) . NHS Employers . 7 May 2019.
  16. News: Pilot sees pharmacists play greater clinical role at GP practices in Norwich. 16 January 2017. Eastern Daily Press. 6 January 2017.
  17. Have medicines use reviews come to represent profit over patient care?. The Pharmaceutical Journal . 2013. 2053-6186. 10.1211/PJ.2013.11124150.