Q&A

Defining Pharmacy Leadership in the VA


 

Dr. Adams. When you are starting on a new project, how do you and your fellow coworkers decide which one is the best to pursue?

Dr. Groppi. We just do them all—I’m joking... sometimes it feels that way. It’s really hard. There are a lot of different things happening at once and many competing priorities, so we try to do as many things as possible. We will assist with requests that come through the Central Office or questions coming from other program offices related to clinical pharmacy practice and we try to get involved and help support and share the success stories of our pharmacist roles as much as possible. For example, the National Nephrology Office contacted us, about the anticoagulation directive. They wanted to do something similar for nephrology since so many pharmacists were effectively and safely managing erythropoietin stimulating agents. This started a conversation.

Often, the priorities come from patient demand such as in primary care. When VA was implementing patient aligned care teams (PACTs), PBM had to ensure that we had conversations ready to describe clinical pharmacy practice in this area. The same thing occurred with hepatitis C. There were new drugs approved and roles for pharmacists, and often there were not enough providers to care for patients. It became an opportunity.

Frequently, choices are based on what we think will be the largest yield and the biggest gaps in care. Other times, it is based on national priorities. We look at the strategic plan for VA and develop our initiatives accordingly. What’s a new priority or component of the strategic plan for this year? What’s the plan for next year or moving forward? Telepharmacy a few years ago or telehealth is an example. We were making sure to describe our practice in the area and then set goals that are going to sustain the profession.

We focused on PACTs during the first few years as we had hundreds of pharmacists practicing. The next big area was specialty and acute care. We started leading workgroups and focused on policies and guidance to share strong practices. The past several years the focus has been on pain management because everyone is struggling with the number of veterans on opioids. When there is a big crisis, you have to hit it full force and look for opportunities that exist. Antimicrobial stewardship was another great example where we were able to provide help and describe the important role of pharmacists based on the strong practices we have across VA. Many times prioritization is on demand, but always keeping in mind what is happening around you and how it supports our VHA strategic plan.

Dr. Adams. What would be your main advice for future pharmacy leaders? Just taking those opportunities and going with them?

Dr. Groppi. Yes. Look for the spot where you might be able to make a positive impact on patient care for the better and improve outcomes with medications. There are data saying that about 80% of treatment is postdiagnosis, and we are quibbling over roles for clinical pharmacy specialists in the team. There is plenty of work that can be done, more than we as a profession or any single profession can often take on. Why don’t we just look for the opportunities to help? There are enough pieces of pie to go around, so let’s just say the pharmacist’s role is to provide management of medications, this is where we can really help. Look for any of these gaps and go for it. Don’t be afraid.

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