Positioning a Paediatric Compounded Non-Sterile Product Electronic Repository (pCNPeRx) within the Health Information Technology Infrastructure
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2017 Pharmacy HIT Goals | Key Strategies Related to Pharmacy Paediatrics |
---|---|
Goal 1: Ensure that HIT supports pharmacists in health care service delivery | Develop white papers describing the appropriate flow of critical electronic information among health care providers, including pharmacists, that protects patient privacy while providing medical information needed for decision making for optimal therapy. |
Goal 2: Achieve integration of clinical data with electronic prescription | Engage and participate in standards-setting organizations, task forces, and work groups to improve electronic exchanges related to e-prescribing. |
Goal 4: Ensure that HIT infrastructure includes and supports MTM services | Work with organizations defining the pharmacist’s MTM role in HIT, such as pharmacy associations, PSTAC, MTM intermediaries, and NCPDP, to ensure that MTM principles and guidelines defined by pharmacists are incorporated into the national HIT infrastructure. |
Goal 5: Integrate pharmacist-delivered immunizations into EHR | Enhance the ability of pharmacists to electronically document, share, and evaluate patient immunization therapy. |
Goal 6: Achieve recognition of pharmacists as meaningful users of EHR quality measures | Ensure that pharmacists are involved in the determination and adoption of the meaningful use of the EHR quality measures pertaining to medications and medication-related activities |
Goal 9: Achieve integration of pharmacies and pharmacists into health information exchanges | Work with policymakers, including state Medicaid agencies, ONC, CMS, HHS, and other members of the health care industry, to promote the importance of pharmacist participation in HIEs |
2. National Electronic Health Information Infrastructure (HIT)
3. Pharmacy-Related HIT across the Continuum of Care for Paediatric Patients
3.1. Initiation and Generation of eRx from the Provider
3.2. Transmission from Provider to Intermediary
3.3. Emulation at the Intermediary
3.4. Order Fulfillment at Community Pharmacy, Sub-Acute Hospital, Home Care Pharmacy, or Pharmacy Benefit Manager (PBM)
4. Where in the Infrastructure could a pCNP Repository Be Inserted?
- Ease of integration into RxNorm-formatted drug coding structures;
- Ease of maintenance and updating for new and modified extemporaneous pCNP formulations;
- Ability to emulate compatible and complete eRx transmission from initiation to fulfillment;
- Ability to facilitate bi-directional integration of clinical use data related to a minimum data set of patient assessment factors such as indication or purpose, dose-response relationships, and outcomes;
- Capability to create medication lists that would aid medication reconciliation across the continuum of care; and
- Ease of third-party adjudication for pCNP preparation and dispensing.
5. Conclusions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Parrish, II, R.H. Positioning a Paediatric Compounded Non-Sterile Product Electronic Repository (pCNPeRx) within the Health Information Technology Infrastructure. Pharmacy 2016, 4, 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy4010002
Parrish, II RH. Positioning a Paediatric Compounded Non-Sterile Product Electronic Repository (pCNPeRx) within the Health Information Technology Infrastructure. Pharmacy. 2016; 4(1):2. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy4010002
Chicago/Turabian StyleParrish, II, Richard H. 2016. "Positioning a Paediatric Compounded Non-Sterile Product Electronic Repository (pCNPeRx) within the Health Information Technology Infrastructure" Pharmacy 4, no. 1: 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy4010002
APA StyleParrish, II, R. H. (2016). Positioning a Paediatric Compounded Non-Sterile Product Electronic Repository (pCNPeRx) within the Health Information Technology Infrastructure. Pharmacy, 4(1), 2. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy4010002