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J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) ; 58(5): 547-553, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30196847

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To discuss the process of developing pharmacy consult services within a university-affiliated dental clinic. Secondary objectives are to describe the frequency of pharmacy consults provided when comparing the initial to the modified protocol and interventions, over time. SETTING: A university-affiliated student-driven dental medicine clinic in the Midwest. PRACTICE DESCRIPTION: The dental clinic consists of third- and fourth-year dental students who provide dental services and are supervised by dental faculty. Pharmacy consults are prompted due to patient criteria met on the protocol, patient-specific factors, drug information, or other reasons. Pharmacists are present to provide consults directly with dental students or patients. PRACTICE INNOVATION: Since October 2013, pharmacy services have been implemented into a dental clinic. A protocol is established to identify dental patients with high risk medications and medical conditions that may interfere with dental treatment. The initial protocol has been modified to include additional high-risk medications and conditions that the pharmacy team was being consulted for outside the protocol criteria. EVALUATION: A retrospective chart review was completed to evaluate the frequency of use of the original pharmacy protocol and the interventions provided. After the protocol was modified to include additional high-risk criteria, a second chart review was completed to assess changes in frequency of protocol use and interventions provided. RESULTS: Pharmacists undergo extensive self-learning to understand the dental-related concerns of the high-risk criteria as well as the dental workflow. The original pharmacy protocol accounted for 42.3% (n = 113) of the overall pharmacy consults (n = 267). After protocol modifications, utilization increased to 76.4% (n = 352, total n = 461). CONCLUSION: Pharmacists are successfully integrated into a dental medicine clinic to provide services to enhance dental patient care. The approximate 30% increase in the use of the pharmacy consult protocol demonstrated that the modified version was more effective.


Subject(s)
Community Pharmacy Services/standards , Dental Care/standards , Dental Clinics/standards , Pharmacy/standards , Referral and Consultation/standards , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Education, Pharmacy/standards , Humans , Interprofessional Relations , Patient Care/standards , Pharmacists/standards , Retrospective Studies , Universities/standards
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