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APOTEKER PADA ERA DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION

APOTEKER PADA ERA DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION. “The transformation of pharmacy practice from a dispensing model to a patient care model”. SUWALDI MARTODIHARDJO FAKULTAS FARMASI UNIVERSITAS GADJAH MADA. Pharmacists’ Evolving Role. From Dispensing Services…. …to a clinical service provider.

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APOTEKER PADA ERA DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION

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  1. APOTEKER PADA ERA DISRUPTIVE INNOVATION “The transformation of pharmacy practice from a dispensing model to a patient care model” SUWALDI MARTODIHARDJO FAKULTAS FARMASI UNIVERSITAS GADJAH MADA

  2. Pharmacists’ Evolving Role From Dispensing Services… …to a clinical service provider

  3. Christensen* originated the theory of disruptive innovation: the process by which a product or service takes root initially in simple applications at the bottom of a market and then moves relentlessly “up market,” eventually displacing established competitors. He first outlined the concept in the seminal 1997 book The Innovator’s Dilemma. In the 2009 book The Innovator’s Prescription, Christensen and his coauthors (Jerome Grossman and Jason Hwang) applied the principles of disruptive innovation to the problems facing the U.S. health care system.  The Innovator’s Prescription provides a comprehensive analysis of strategies that would improve health care and make it affordable.

  4. In almost every industry, the products or services that are offered initially are so complicated and expensive that only people with a great deal of money or skill can afford or use them. Then at some point, the industry is transformed; the products or services become simpler, easier to use, and much more convenient and affordable. The agent of this transformation is disruptive innovation. Disruptive innovations create new markets for products or services, or they reshape existing markets. The end result is that an entirely new population of consumers gains access to the products or services.

  5. Disruptive innovations have three key components: • Technological enabler. • This is a simplifying technology that transforms a fundamental problem from something complicated that requires deep training and expertise to resolve, into something simple that can be addressed by people with less training or skill in a predictable, rules-based way. • 2. Business model innovation. • The simplifying technology has to be embedded in a business model that can deliver the resulting lower-cost solution to customers profitably, in ways that make the solution affordable and conveniently accessible. • 3. Value network.  • The business model in turn has to become part of a network or system whose constituents (e.g., suppliers, distributors) can respond together profitably to the common needs of a class of customers.

  6. Lessons and implications for pharmacy Pharmacists should not try to effect change by educating people outside the pharmacy profession (e.g., patients, other health care professionals) about the value of pharmacist services. Instead, pharmacists should learn about and employ the principles of disruptive innovation. These principles provide the knowledge needed to disrupt the system from the inside out. How do pharmacists avoid going head-to-head with other health care practitioners for the same business? By focusing on what pharmacists know and do best: drug therapy. Pharmacists offer a solution to medication therapy problems that no other practitioner can provide. Pharmacists should be willing to assume some risk by beginning with smaller solutions that may not bring in much money at first. Later, pharmacists can expand their offerings and negotiate better payment structures as the value becomes apparent.

  7. Target areas of nonconsumption A shift in mindset may be needed, because many pharmacists do not want to be considered ancillary personnel or physician extenders—they want to be considered at the same “level” as physicians. Pharmacists need to define a separate performance measure that reflects their value to the customer (patients). Consider that Harvard University likely views itself as superior to the “second-class citizen” online universities, and this undoubtedly is true if the performance measure is research (which informs national rankings). However, online universities are being shown to offer superior teaching. Which is of greater importance to the customer (students)?

  8. Target areas of nonconsumption (cont’d) Adherence counseling may be the perfect “Sony space” of nonconsumption for pharmacists. The job is important, and no other health care providers are stepping forward to embrace it. Emerging data reveal that a majority of consumers (~75%) want someone to talk with them about their medication, yet relatively few report ever having had a conversation with a pharmacist about their medication. The opportunity to capitalize on this—to focus on moving pharmacists toward face-to-face discussions with patients, adding the element of adherence—seems ripe.

  9. Target areas of nonconsumption (cont’d) Other possible nonconsumption markets include: adults with aging parents, (2) patients who do not have health insurance, (3) elementary school children participating in sports leagues, (4) patients with multiple chronic conditions and medications from multiple prescribers, and (5) hospitals discharging patients to home settings. Any of these markets might be willing to pay on a cash basis for medication use consultations, with the length and price of the consultation based on the complexity of the problem. For example, adults with aging parents might be willing to pay a higher fee for the peace of mind associated with knowing that someone is helping their parents avoid problems; hospitals might be willing to pay a higher fee to avoid medication-related readmissions.

  10. Help potential customers understand what pharmacists are selling Pharmacists need to partner with physicians at all levels. Physicians do not have time to do everything they need or want to do; pharmacists can help physicians focus on what they do best if physicians delegate some duties to pharmacists. This is already occurring in specialty practice areas where pharmacist specialists (e.g., pediatric pharmacists) work as part of a team with medical specialists.

  11. Help potential customers understand what pharmacists are selling The requirement for specifiability, measurability, and predictability of pharmacist-delivered patient care services provides a strong argument for standards and accreditation. For example, the Center for Pharmacy Practice Accreditation (CPPA)—a partnership between APhA and the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy—is developing principles, policies, and standards that will offer the general public and users of pharmacy services a means of identifying pharmacies that satisfy the accreditation criteria and are focused on advancing patient care, safety, and quality.

  12. Stake a role in chronic care The pharmacy profession must take responsibility for adherence. It is the most basic medication therapy management service; pharmacists serve as a mechanism for monitoring what patients are doing and holding them accountable for adhering to prescribed therapies and behavior changes. Pharmacists need a business model to facilitate adherence counseling and interventions. It may be valuable for pharmacy associations to form a coalition with the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) and others to seek provider status for pharmacists. The hope is that provider status would lead to increased adherence because pharmacists could get paid for providing those services.

  13. Figure out who has a job to be done Pharmacists need to consider all of the jobs that all of the parties involved are trying to do, then show why pharmacists should be hired to do those jobs. For example, self-insured employers were crucial to the success of programs such as the Asheville Project and the Diabetes Ten City Challenge. Pharmacists might approach hospital CEOs and say, “You are struggling with the challenge of improving your performance on quality measures that are advertised to the public. Pharmacists can help you by….” The pharmaceutical industry and patients’ families both have a strong incentive to improve medication adherence.

  14. Will the patient take the therapy? What does the patient view as an improved quality of life? Safe drug therapy Effective drug therapy Aims of Pharmaceutical Care Economic drug therapy Improve quality of life

  15. Good Pharmcy Pactice (GPP) by WHO and FIP 2011 • The definition of GPP: The practice of pharmacy that responds to the needs of the people who use the pharmacists’ services to provide optimal, evidence-based care.

  16. THE MISSION OF PHARMACY PRACTICE • To contribute to health improvement and to help patients with health problems to make the best use of their medicines

  17. The six components of the mission of Pharmacy Practice: 1. being readily available to patients with or without an appointment 2. identifying and managing or triaging health- related problems 3. health promotion 4. assuring effectiveness of medicines 5. preventing harm from medicines 6. making responsible use of limited health- care resources

  18. Four main roles of Pharmacist to serve the society • Prepare, obtain, store, secure, distribute, administer, dispense and dispose of medical products • Provide effective medication therapy management • Maintain and improve professional performance • Contribute to improve effectiveness of the health care system and public health

  19. Role 2.Provide effective medication therapy management (MTM) • Function A : Assess patient health status and needs • Pharmacists should ensure that health management, disease prevention, and lifestyle behavior are incorporated into the patient assessment and care process • Function B: Manage patient medication therapy • Pharmacist should have access to, contribute to and use all necessary clinical and patient data to coordinate effective medication therapy management, especially when multiple health-care practitioners are involved in the patient’s medication therapy, and intervene if necessary • Function C: Monitor patient progress and outcomes Pharmacists consider patient diagnosis and patient specific needs when assessing patient response to medicine therapy and intervene if necessary • Function D: Provide information about medicines and health-related issues Pharmacists provide sufficient health, disease, and medicine specific information to patients

  20. . • .

  21. PERATURAN PEMERINTAH NOMOR 51 TAHUN 2009 TENTANG PEKERJAAN KEFARMASIAN • Pelayanan Kefarmasian: Suatu pelayanan langsung dan bertanggung jawab kepada pasien yang berkaitan dengan sediaan farmasi dengan maksud mencapai hasil yang pasti untuk meningkatkan mutu kehidupan pasien • Pelayanan Kefarmasian: Pelayanan komprehensif dilakukan oleh apoteker kepada pasien • Aktivitas-aktivitas praktek kefarmasian: 1. melakukan dispensing obat dan sediaan farmasi lainnya 2. mencegah dan mengatasi problema terapi obat 3. promosi kesehatan dan mencegah penyakit 4. managing health systems

  22. Drug Therapy Cycle Patient’ Complaint ↓ ↑ Diagnosis Undesired Desired ↓ ↑ ↑ Modes of therapyClinical Response ↓ ↑ Drug Therapy Drug Usage ↓ ↑ Prescription → Dispensing

  23. Kebutuhan Pasien dan Problema Terapi Obat

  24. What Determines Our Health? • Attitude about ourselves and health • Daily nutrition – eating habits • Exercise habits • Stress management/coping skills • Self talk and overall mental attitude • Relationship with our higher self – divine • Social relationships and outlets

  25. APA YANG MENYEBABKAN KITA SAKIT? • NUTRACEUTICALS: Let Food be Your Medicine

  26. Well Balanced Diet, Prerequisite to Good Health

  27. Well Balanced Diet, Prerequisite to Good Health • Keep a well balanced diet,  in order to maintain the acid and alkali equilibrium of the body fluids. • Relieve stress, to keep a stable mental state for maintaining the equilibrium of the autonomic nervous system. Keeping in mind that our human bodies are mostly fluid, in order to function at their best, our bodies need to always be in that neutral, balanced place.  On the pH scale, we should be striving to maintain a pH balance of about 7.4. There isn’t much wiggle room either way.  If your pH balance drops below 6.8 or goes above 7.8 your “gong” would stop ringing altogether and you’d die.  That’s a very narrow range to maintain.

  28. Here's a picture of healthy red blood cells: Blood cells have a negative charge on the outside and a positive charge inside; this is what keeps them healthy and far apart from each other.

  29. Here's a picture of red blood cells in over-acidic blood: • When your body is over-acidic, the acid strips your blood of it's negative charge. • Your blood cells no longer have the same repelling force and clump together.

  30. Maintaining health or Curing a disease • The suggested diet is 80% of alkaline food and 20% of acid food. • HIGHLY ACID  FOODS: egg yolk, cheese, sweets in which white sugar is used, dried bonito, oyster, and herring roe. • MODERATELY ACID  FOODS:  ham, bacon, horse meat, chicken, tuna, pork, white bread, beef,wheat,  butter, and eel.

  31. Maintaining health or Curing a disease • SLIGHTLY ACID  FOODS:   rice, peanuts, octopus, clams, liver, fried bean curd, and beer. • SLIGHTLY ALKALINE  FOODS:    red beans, onions, cabbage, Japanese radishes, apples, a kind of chinese cabbage, and bean curd. • MODERATELY ALKALINE FOODS:       raisins, soybeans, cucumbers, carrots, tomatoes, spinach, banana, tangerines, pumpkins, strawberries, honeywort, white of egg, pickled plums, and lemon. • HIGHLY ALKALINE  FOODS:  seaweed, grapes, tea, and wine.

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