Virginia Commonwealth University School of Pharmacy, 410 N. 12th St., POB 980533, Richmond, VA 23298-0533, USA.
J Manag Care Spec Pharm. 2014 Mar;20(3):291-300. doi: 10.18553/jmcp.2014.20.3.291.
The need for accurate calculation of long-term care (LTC) pharmacies' costs to dispense (CTD) has become more important as payers have moved toward reimbursement models based on pharmacies' actual acquisition cost for drug products and the Centers for Medicare Medicaid Services (CMS) has implemented requirements that LTC pharmacies must dispense prescriptions for certain branded drugs in 14-day-or-less quantities.
To (a) calculate the average cost that the typical independently owned, closed-door LTC pharmacy currently incurs to dispense and deliver a prescription to the resident of a client LTC facility and (b) estimate how CMS-mandated changes to a 14-day-or-less dispensing cycle would affect the typical LTC pharmacy's average CTD.
METHODS: The data requirements and measurement model were developed by academic researchers in consultation with an industry advisory committee of independent LTC pharmacy owners. A survey instrument was constructed to collect financial and operating data required to calculate the CTD. Surveys were distributed via 3 dissemination channels to approximately 1,000 independently owned, closed-door LTC pharmacies. The National Community Pharmacists Association mailed surveys to their LTC members; 3 major national wholesalers distributed surveys to their LTC customers through their newsletters; and 3 LTC group purchasing organizations distributed the surveys to their members through emails, newsletters, mailings, and/or regional meetings. Each pharmacy's CTD was calculated by dividing total LTC dispensing-related costs by the total number of prescriptions dispensed. Dispensing-related costs included costs incurred to physically dispense and deliver prescriptions (e.g., dispensing pharmacists' and technicians' salaries and costs of medication containers) and costs incurred to support the dispensing function (e.g., salaries of delivery and medical records personnel). A model based on dispensing-related fixed, variable, and semivariable costs was developed to examine the impact of shorter dispensing cycles on LTC pharmacies' CTD. A prescription volume increase of 19% was assumed based on converting only solid oral branded drugs to short-cycle dispensing.
A diverse sample of 64 closed-door LTC pharmacies returned usable surveys. Sales from dispensing to LTC facilities accounted for more than 98% of total sales. Respondents indicated that they currently dispensed 23% of total doses in 14-day-or-less cycles and 76% in 28-31 day cycles. Most pharmacies used automated medication packaging technology, heat and cold package sealers, bar code systems, sterile compounding hoods, LTC printers or labelers, and electronic prescribing. The median CTD was $13.54 with an interquartile range (25th to 75th percentiles) of $10.51 to $17.66. More than half of dispensing-related costs were from personnel expense, of which pharmacists and managers accounted for more than 40%. The results of the fixed and variable cost modeling suggested that converting solid oral brand-name drugs from 30-day to 14-day dispensing cycles would lower the median per prescription CTD to between $11.63 and $12.54, depending on the assumptions made about the effects of semivariable costs. However, this decrease in per prescription dispensing cost is dwarfed by an increase in total dispensing cost incurred by pharmacies that results from doubling the monthly volume of short-cycle prescriptions that must be dispensed. The result is that the typical LTC pharmacy in our sample incurred a CTD of $13.54 if the medication is dispensed in a 30-day cycle or $23.26 if the medication is dispensed in two 14-day cycles (at a cost of $11.63 for each cycle dispensed).
Our results indicated a median CTD of $13.54 for the typical independently owned, closed-door LTC pharmacy. Moving to a shorter cycle would reduce pharmacies' average per-prescription CTD but would increase the number of prescriptions dispensed per month. Our results indicated that transitioning solid oral branded products to 14-day cycles would reduce the median CTD to a minimum of $11.63 but would increase total dispensing costs because each sold oral branded prescription would require twice the number of monthly dispensing events.
随着支付方转向基于药品实际采购成本的报销模式,以及医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心(CMS)实施了要求长期护理(LTC)药房在 14 天或更短时间内分发某些品牌药物的规定,准确计算 LTC 药房分发(CTD)的长期成本变得更加重要。
(a)计算典型的独立封闭式 LTC 药房目前为向客户 LTC 设施的居民分发和交付处方而产生的平均成本,以及(b)估计 CMS 规定的 14 天或更短分发周期变化将如何影响典型 LTC 药房的平均 CTD。
学术研究人员与独立 LTC 药房所有者的行业咨询委员会协商制定了数据要求和测量模型。构建了一个调查工具,以收集计算 CTD 所需的财务和运营数据。通过 3 种分发渠道向大约 1000 家独立封闭式 LTC 药房分发了调查。全国社区药剂师协会向其 LTC 成员邮寄了调查;3 家主要的全国批发商通过他们的时事通讯向他们的 LTC 客户分发了调查;3 家 LTC 团体采购组织通过电子邮件、时事通讯、邮件和/或区域会议向其成员分发了调查。每家药房的 CTD 通过将与 LTC 配药相关的总费用除以配药的总处方数来计算。与配药相关的费用包括物理配药和交付处方所产生的费用(例如,配药药剂师和技术员的工资以及药物容器的费用)和支持配药功能所产生的费用(例如,交付和医疗记录人员的工资)。开发了一个基于配药相关固定、可变和半可变成本的模型,以研究更短的配药周期对 LTC 药房 CTD 的影响。假设仅将固体口服品牌药物转换为短周期配药,处方量就会增加 19%。
64 家封闭式 LTC 药房返回了可用的调查。向 LTC 设施的销售占总销售额的 98%以上。受访者表示,他们目前在 14 天或更短的周期内分发 23%的总剂量,在 28-31 天的周期内分发 76%的剂量。大多数药房使用自动化药物包装技术、热封和冷封封口机、条形码系统、无菌化合物罩、LTC 打印机或标签机以及电子处方。CTD 的中位数为 13.54 美元,四分位距(25%至 75%分位数)为 10.51 美元至 17.66 美元。与配药相关的成本中超过一半来自人员费用,其中药剂师和经理占 40%以上。固定和可变成本建模的结果表明,将固体口服品牌药物从 30 天周期转换为 14 天周期将使每处方 CTD 降低到 11.63 美元至 12.54 美元之间,具体取决于对半可变成本影响的假设。然而,与药房每月必须分发的短周期处方数量增加导致的总配药成本增加相比,每处方配药成本的这种下降微不足道。结果是,我们样本中的典型 LTC 药房如果以 30 天周期配药,则每处方 CTD 为 13.54 美元,如果以两个 14 天周期配药,则每处方 CTD 为 23.26 美元(每个周期配药成本为 11.63 美元)。
我们的结果表明,典型的独立封闭式 LTC 药房的平均 CTD 为 13.54 美元。转向更短的周期将降低药房的平均每处方 CTD,但会增加每月的配药数量。我们的结果表明,将固体口服品牌产品转换为 14 天周期将使中位数 CTD 降低至最低 11.63 美元,但会增加总配药成本,因为每个销售的口服品牌处方将需要两倍的每月配药次数。