Member profile: Scott Cady, Pharm.D.

By JOHN SPRINGLI | Communications Manager | MPA

Situated in the middle of downtown in the quaint northwest Missouri town of Chillicothe is Hometown HealthMart Pharmacy, home to Scott Cady. Working side-by-side with his wife Mary, he is one of the lead pharmacists at Hometown as well as a partial owner. To top it all off, as pharmacy technician Jessica Zeger says, “he’s the best boss I’ve ever had to work with.”

Scott has been working at Hometown since 2006 when he graduated from the University of Kansas with a Doctor of Pharmacy degree. This, however, was not his start into the world of pharmacy.

Growing up in the Kansas City area, his father worked in the pharmaceutical industry doing research and development and Scott planned on going along similar lines as he attended Baylor University. After graduation, he moved north to Cincinnati, Ohio to work for a pharmaceutical research company but ultimately knew he needed to continue his education. Eventually, Scott moved back to the Kansas City area and enrolled at the KU School of Pharmacy in 2002. While in school, Scott says his areas of interest shifted from research based to more clinically thinking.

Scott moved to Chillicothe in 2006 and began working at Hometown, where he met Melissa King. While the two are similar in age, she was a veteran to him since she had been in the business for near six years before he came to Hometown. She says it was interesting working with him at the beginning because while he was clinically based, he still brought on that research side he had learned in Ohio and prior. This way of thinking varied from her own real-world practical setting ideal.

“He really looks at all the clinical aspects and evaluates the patient and the medication,” King says. It’s nice that we all think a little differently and bring different aspects to the table for the same result.

Being there for the patients is another strong asset that Scott brings to the table according to King.

“I would put him up with any doctor on his bedside manner,” she says.

Keeping his patients in mind is something Zeger says he does an “A+ job at.” Several days prior, Zeger says, an elderly patient whose son had just passed away suddenly came into Hometown and ended up breaking down and crying in Scott’s arms and before the staff knew it, Scott was tearing up right along side the patient.

“You wouldn’t see that in another pharmacy,” Zeger says. “We all know these people by name as soon as they walk in the door and I think that is the most important thing.”

In the fall of 2006 Scott joined the Missouri Pharmacy Association. One of his first duties was being apart of the Continuing Education committee, followed by the new membership committee and finally to his current post as a Member-at-Large of the Board of Directors. While he has worn several different hats for the MPA, he says he’s always known joining was the best thing to do.

“While I was at the University of Kansas, I was greatly involved with the Kansas Pharmacy Association as well as the American Pharmacist Association, so being in associations and being able to help direct our profession or educate the people who help direct our profession has kind of always been there for me. Joining MPA was kind of a no brainer,” says Scott. “I want to make sure we do what we want to do that’s in the best interest of our patients.”

While he may be a Jayhawk in Tiger country, he is still a dedicated pharmacist to all his patients and staff, he is also a wonderful husband and father to his wife and two small children say King and Zeger. Scott and his wife Mary have a 2-year-old son who in Scotts words, “will be more intelligent than he is some day,” and a 3-month-old daughter who was born over the summer.

“I’ve seen Scott and his wife Mary as they went from newlyweds to growing their family,” King says. “They’re learning how to balance pharmacy with being parents and the fact that Scott’s still devoted to organizations like MPA shows that they know what life’s all about.”

Pharmacists Mutual Announces Edward J. Yorty as New President

By LAURIE HARMS | Pharmacists Mutual Companies

Pharmacists Mutual Insurance Company Board of Directors has named Edward J. Yorty to serve as the company’s President. Yorty was also elected Director to the Pharmacists Mutual Insurance Company and The Pharmacists Life Insurance Company Boards.

Ed Yorty has over 20 years of experience in the insurance industry, including the last 15 years working for mutual insurance companies. Most recently, he served as CFO of Oregon Mutual Insurance and prior to that, he served the physicians and dentists of Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and Washington D.C. as Vice President and Actuary at Medical Mutual Liability Insurance Society of Maryland.

Yorty is a Fellow of the Casualty Actuarial Society and a member of the American Academy of Actuaries. He has a Bachelor of Science Degree in Meteorology from Pennsylvania State University, and he is currently enrolled in Northeastern University’s Master of Finance Program.

Chief Executive Officer, Ed Berg, stated, “The Pharmacists Mutual Board of Directors conducted a nationwide search for my successor, and we are very pleased to find someone with Ed Yorty’s experience and credentials. We believe he will continue our company’s legacy of forward thinking operations coupled with the highest level of emphasis on customer service and value. In addition, Ed will be visible and active in the pharmacy community as well as in our home office community of Algona, Iowa.”

Ed and his wife, Tammy, have settled into Algona with their three dogs. When Ed is not working, he enjoys running with his dogs and has run Oregon’s 200 mile Hood to Coast Relay six times. He also enjoys skiing, reading and learning German.

Ed Berg will continue as Pharmacists Mutual Companies CEO until spring 2012 when Ed Yorty will succeed him as President and CEO.

Pharmacists Mutual Companies are licensed in 49 states and the District of Columbia, and serve over 70,000 customers. Pharmacists Mutual Companies provide business, personal, life, health, and investment products for its core markets of pharmacy, home medical/home health, and card & gift stores. Learn more at www.phmic.com or call 800.247.5930. or 573.519.4551

Vaccinating Missouri

In 2007, legislation was passed to allow Missouri pharmacists, for the first time, to dispense vaccinations to their patients.

By CHRISTIAN S. TADRUS, Pharm.D. | Treasurer | MPA

If we are truly to call ourselves health care professionals, we need be focused on health.  For a pharmacist, that primarily means the injection of our pharmacologic knowledgebase into the plan of care for the patient either at the dispensing level or in a growing number of cases, through close collaboration with other health care professionals and the patients they serve.  Not that we can’t offer other services and products in our environments but the core of what a pharmacist needs to be known and relied upon for should be centered on health and health-related services.

One of the services pharmacists can offer to its clientele is immunizations. Pharmacists in all 50 states can now vaccinate. Missouri was somewhat late as an addition to the national list granting pharmacists the ability to offer such services having only been granted legislative authority to do so in 2007.

Training isn’t hard to acquire. The American Pharmacist Association (APhA) offers the most widely available certificate program at many association meetings around the country – including MPA’s own Annual Convention.  In addition, both schools of pharmacy in Missouri offer or require immunization training for their students prior to graduation.

Giving vaccinations isn’t hard to do. Dispensing pharmacists are masters of efficiencies – we have to be with the workload we’re expected to address during a typical day.  For most, a vaccination has become “just another script” in terms of processing. Streamlined processes involving intake, data entry and processing, verification, administration and follow up documentation have evolved in the busy pharmacy environment to allow patients to complete the entire process – from walk-in to injection in around 20 minutes including a Missouri Board of Pharmacy requirement to wait 15 minutes after injection for observation).

Administration is considered a different act from dispensing. In Missouri, a prescription is an authorization for a pharmacist to dispense a properly labeled product to a patient.  This allows for dispensing of a vaccine as well but in order to actually administer that prescription, a pharmacist must have authorization from physician or prescriber to do so (and have proper board-approved training).

The Board of Pharmacy has published a wealth of information on its website to help pharmacists understand the qualifications, procedures, record-keeping and notification requirements for immunizing pharmacists. A checklist is available that cuts through the legalese of the regulations and serves as a quick reference for a immunizing pharmacist or employer.

Many pharmacists are reluctant to get started, those with just a few injections under their belts lack confidence to give injections, or perhaps those not yet comfortable integrating injection directly into existing workflow don’t have to go big right out of the gate. Strategies to help gain confidence and the experience needed to ramp up to a more significant practice include options such as offering vaccinations only to your staff and family for the first year, offering less frequently-requested vaccines such as zoster or pneumonia for the first few months or simply offering vaccinations by scheduled appointment only when workload is less stressful.

In fact, appointment-based vaccination services offer additional benefits that can be used to the pharmacists’ advantage. Grouping like vaccinations can reduce errors due to confusion that may arise from switching between vaccines, needle sizes and routes of administration between patients.  Families can come in together to help alleviate fear related to receiving an injection.  And scheduled appointments can be a good solution for attracting larger groups of patients needing special accommodations for vaccination services.

Developing a solid vaccination service will take time and effort. Just having the vaccine in the refrigerator or freezer won’t make the sales happen.  It typically takes significant marketing efforts, word of mouth and some good old fashioned door-to-door salesmanship to generate significant movement in this category.

Get out and market your services! High value targets should include your own patients – especially those with chronic health diseases such as diabetes, asthma or heart failure. Our own patients are easy to reach through personal daily contact, bag-tags, direct mail or traditional advertising avenues such as radio, tv and newspaper. Physicians and other prescribers can become excellent partners and referral sources as well. Employer groups, small businesses, chambers of commerce offices, nursing home administrators, home health agencies, senior centers and church groups also represent potential clients.

Pharmacists typically experience resistance from prescribers when made aware of a pharmacist’s immunization offerings due to a lack of understanding regarding a pharmacist’s qualifications, territorial concerns and frustration due to competitive pressure. The immunizing pharmacist should make efforts to reassure providers that these services are meant to help meet the patient care goals of the provider and are not meant to supplant or replace them.  Low reimbursement and workload are not only burdens of the pharmacy world, and prescribers will often see the benefit of utilizing a competent and caring pharmacist to help improve the bottom line.

The self-insured employer group is a good space to start marketing when you’re ready to go big.  Many self-insured employers are large enough to have someone that is responsible for controlling their health care costs. In some cases this will be a nurse or a human resource manager and in other cases might be the vice president or even CEO.  Pharmacists should use their existing contacts to try to identify the person with authority to make those decisions and set up an appointment. Personal conversations with decision makers are typically how growth happens for an organization or provider. Such meetings also open the doors to additional service offerings such as Medication Therapy Management.

Pharmacists should be prepared to discuss with corporate decision makers the benefits of offering immunizations – especially flu shots – to their employees.

A power point or other document can help you clearly lay out the rationale for immunizations and the benefit of providing them.

The Immunization Action Coalition (www.immunize.org) has one of the largest and most complete collections of resources available on the web. A visit to the site will reveal the myriad of talking points and clinical resources available to the immunizer. ϖ

Bear (Market) Attack Survival

“Bear & Pharmacist Code of Ethics” design by John Springli | MPA

Missouri pharmacies are forced to adapt during economic recession to keep doors open

By STACEY PETERS | Marketing Manager | MPA

With the national unemployment rate hovering around 9 percent, jobs across the country are harder and harder to come by according to the National Conference of State Legislators. In Missouri, the unemployment rate has decreased nearly 1 percent since September 2009; however, it still floats around an all time high of 8.7 percent, according to the Department of Numbers. This means that more than 914,000 Missourians were uninsured in 2010, as stated by CoverMissouri.org. For pharmacists and pharmacies, this means that the thousands without insurance are more likely to go without preventive care or to delay or forego medical care, says Families USA. This will cause medication and prescriptions needed by pharmacists to decrease.

According to Pharmacy Times, the recession has forced many pharmacies to close stores or cut their hours because consumer shopping habits have changed in the new economy and some of those habits will have an impact on purchases of prescriptions and OTC healthcare products for the next few years, according to Thom Blischok, president of consulting and innovation for Information Resources Inc. (IRI).

Over the last six months, 23 percent of consumers who have incomes of $35,000 a year or less say they had decreased their spending on healthcare products. And 17 percent of people who earn $35,000 to $55,000 a year say they have cut back on buying healthcare products, founded by IRI.

Several Missouri Pharmacy Association members who own independent pharmacies say the economy has reshaped and transformed how they do pharmacy. Customers are looking for the cheapest option; Tim Mitchell of Family Pharmacy of Neosho says, “Mail orders or chain stores have pressured many of our patients to switch to their services because they might be able to save them money.”

Clarissa Hall of Hall’s Pharmacy, Inc. in Washington, MO says “The economy, recession, has affected the way we do business. We try our best to provide our patients with the cheapest option while still giving them the benefit they expect from their medications.”

Tim says, “Our stores have stayed pretty busy throughout the recession. We have maintained our volume by continuing to offer top of the line customer service and offering a wide variety of other services that can produce alternative revenue.”

While, Steve Horst of Horst Pharmacy in Jackson says, “Our business is doing good even with the poor economy and current recession, that we are just going with the flow.”

“As an independent pharmacy owner in a large ocean of big box sharks, the only way to survive is creating a niche,” says Clarissa.

Steve says, “We have been marketing to local physicians to refer new and old patients to our pharmacy for prescriptions, medications, and supplies”

“We have continued to perform every MTM opportunity available for payment for our patients which typically gets patients into our stores and creates trust between patients and our pharmacists. We have continued providing diabetes supplies and medications, immunizations of all types, INR tests, blood pressure and blood glucose screenings, etc.,” says Tim.

“With the Compounding Center, we are able to offer some cheaper alternatives that wouldn’t normally be an option for the patient and as the Compounding Center picks up speed, I have realized it is going to be the saving grace for our little independent pharmacy,” says Clarissa.

Customer satisfaction is not only meeting your customer’s expectations, but also exceeding them.

Steve says “We will find the best solution for our individual patients situation”

Tim says “I strongly feel that the key to a successful business is built by developing personal relationships with patients while having genuine concern for their well-being. This concern, along with patient satisfaction and good customer service, will always be my primary goals as a pharmacist.”

Moving medicines are the cornerstone of the pharmacy profession, medication access and supply. Always consider new ways of managing the transition of medicines from pharmacy to patient.

Suzanne Gude with Drug Topic says, “There is hope. Pharmacy owners in various parts of the country are achieving diverse levels of profitability. The most successful credit niche markets as the key. Like you, these owners were frustrated until they adopted a profitable and less stressful way to run their business. These independents realized compounding, senior care, DME, infusion therapy, HIV therapy, nuclear pharmacy, vet care, and integrative medicine as well as other pharmacy niches are all viable solutions,” for a successful independent pharmacy.

Third National Prescription Drug Take-Back Event Collects 188.5 Tons

DEA News Release

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Americans participating in the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s third National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day on October 29 turned in more than 188.5 tons of unwanted or expired medications for safe and proper disposal at the 5,327 take-back sites that were available in all 50 states and U.S. territories. When the results of the three Take Back Days to date are combined, the DEA and its state, local, and tribal law-enforcement and community partners have removed 498.5 tons of medication from circulation in the past 13 months.

“The amount of prescription drugs turned in by the American public during the past three Take-Back Day events speaks volumes about the need to develop a convenient way to rid homes of unwanted or expired prescription drugs,” says DEA Administrator Michele M. Leonhart.

“With the continued support and hard work of our more than 3,945 state, local, and tribal law enforcement and community partners, these three events have dramatically reduced the risk of prescription drug diversion and abuse, and increased awareness of this critical public health issue,” says Leonhart.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, enough prescription painkillers were prescribed in 2010 to medicate every American adult around-the-clock for one month. Often, some of these medicines languish in the home and are highly susceptible to diversion, misuse, and abuse. Rates of prescription drug abuse in the U.S. are alarmingly high—more Americans currently abuse prescription drugs than the number of those using cocaine, hallucinogens, heroin, and inhalants combined, according to the 2010 National Survey on Drug Use and Health. Studies show that the majority of teens who abuse prescription drugs obtain them from family and friends for free, inwcluding from the home medicine cabinet. Many Americans simply do not know how to properly dispose of their unused or expired medicine, often flushing it down the toilet or throwing it away. These methods can pose both safety and environmental hazards.

Four days after DEA’s first Take-Back Day event September 25, 2010, Congress passed legislation amending the Controlled Substances Act to allow the DEA to develop a permanent process for people to safely and conveniently dispose of their prescription drugs. After President Obama signed the Safe and Secure Drug Disposal Act of 2010 on October 12, DEA immediately began developing regulations for a more permanent solution.

The DEA’s Take-Back events are a significant piece of the White House’s prescription drug abuse prevention strategy entitled Epidemic: Responding to America’s Prescription Drug Abuse Crisis developed and promoted by the Office of National Drug Control Policy. ϖ