|
HHS
Secretary Tommy G. Thompson today announced the approval of
novel projects at two groups of community health centers
intended to make prescription drugs more readily available to
safety-net patients and less costly.
In
the first project, pharmacists at a central health center site
in Spokane, Wash., will network with other health centers and
use computer equipment to dispense prescription drugs through
vending machines to patients at remote health clinics.
The second project, operating from Ticonderoga, N.Y.,
will use multiple pharmacy contracts to lower drug prices and
improve patients’ access to prescription drugs and pharmacy
services.
“These
imaginative demonstrations offer solutions to two circumstances
-- isolation and lack of competition -- that conspire to deprive
uninsured and underserved Americans of the prescription
medications they need at a fair price,” Secretary Thompson
said.
In
Washington, the Community Health Association of Spokane (CHAS)
will rely on a four-step process to send drugs through vending
machines to patients at remote clinics:
- Health
care providers at the clinics fax prescription orders to the
central CHAS pharmacy.
- A
pharmacist at the central facility receives the prescription
and fills it via computer link to a locked vending machine
in a secure area of the network clinics, where it is
dispensed in a bottle.
- A
pharmacy technician picks up the bottle, attaches a label,
and delivers it to the waiting patient.
- The
process may end at this point, or the patient may use
videoconferencing equipment – another element of the demo
– to receive counseling on proper drug usage from the
pharmacist at the central CHAS facility.
CHAS will manage its four clinics in partnership with Native
Health of Spokane, an urban Native American program, and
Northeast Washington Health Programs, a community health center
in Chewelah, Wash. The
network will provide affordable
medications to approximately 13,500 low-income or rural patients
who otherwise would have had difficulty obtaining their
prescription drugs.
In New York, the project managed by the Hudson Headwaters Health
Network, a community health center serving the Ticonderoga area,
will contract with multiple pharmacies to make medications and
services more accessible to the patients served by the
network’s 11 clinics.
The two demonstration projects are part
of a new initiative announced June
18 to help organizations that participate in the 340B drug
discount program find creative ways to reduce administrative
costs and improve access to prescription drugs for patients.
Managed by the Health Resources and Services
Administration's Office of Pharmacy Affairs, the 340B program
requires drug manufacturers to sell drugs to specified
safety-net health care providers at a discount rate determined
by a formula in the legislation that created the program.
Discounts average 25 percent to 40 percent on most drugs.
For
a description of the initiative's requirements and review
criteria, go to http://www.hrsa.gov/odpp
and click on "What’s New."
###
Note:
All HHS press releases, fact sheets and other press materials
are available at www.hhs.gov/news.
|