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Care in the community: Michigan pharmacists help residents manage hypertension

ONE IN THREE MICHIGAN ADULTS HAS HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE (HYPERTENSION)

A LEADING CAUSE OF HEART ATTACK AND STROKE

MICHIGAN MEDICINE HAS TEAMED UP  WITH PHARMACISTS

MAKING IT MUCH EASIER FOR PATIENTS TO LOWER THEIR RISKS

AND STAY CLOSE TO HOME

MARIA HOCHENDONER PATIENT

I had to come to terms with it. I needed to do something about it or else it could impact my health drastically.

40,000 OF THE PATIENTS SEEN AT U-M CLINICS HAVE HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE

DR. LINDA TERRELL MEDICAL DIRECTOR, U-M BRIARWOOD CLINIC

It’s a busy clinic. You can imagine when a physician cares for nearly 2,000 patients of their own, they don’t have time to see every patient as often perhaps as they would like.

PATIENTS WITH HYPERTENSION NEED TO CLOSELY MONITOR AND CONTROL THEIR BLOOD PRESSURE

DR. HAE MI CHOE CHIEF QUALITY OFFICER, U-M MEDICAL GROUP

I think access for patients is really a big challenge and trying to find a way for patients to be able to receive the care they need at the right time, at the right place.

90% OF AMERICANS LIVE WITHIN FIVE MILES OF A PHARMACY

ALAN TANABE PHARMACIST, MEIJER PHARMACY

We were contacted by Dr. Hae Mi Choe who was interested in starting a program with Meijer pharmacy, starting a partnership which would allow patients who have blood pressure concerns with the option of being seen at a Meijer pharmacy clinic.

PARTICIPATING PHARMACISTS ARE TRAINED BY MICHIGAN MEDICINE

THEY REVIEW EACH PATIENT’S MEDICAL HISTORY

AND REGULARLY COMMUNICATE  WITH PATIENTS’ DOCTORS

PATIENTS RECEIVE FOLLOW-UP AND EDUCATION ABOUT DISEASE, MEDICATIONS AND LIFESTYLE AND A PERSONALIZED PLAN

ALL CONDUCTED IN A PRIVATE SETTING

You don’t feel like you’re rushed. You can ask questions and you can ask about the medications.

PHARMACISTS PROVIDE CARE IN 14 OF MICHIGAN MEDICINE’S PRIMARY CARE CLINICS

AND NOW AT THREE MEIJER COMMUNITY PHARMACIES

I think we’ve seen, looking at the data, extraordinary results where the majority of our patients, after meeting with the Meijer pharmacist, have achieved better control of their blood pressures.

MICHIGAN MEDICINE’S TEAM-BASED APPROACH WAS RECOGNIZED BY THE CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION

AS THE TOP NATIONAL HYPERTENSION CONTROL PROGRAM INVOLVING PHARMACISTS

THE CDC HOPES TO SPREAD THIS MODEL

TO OTHER HEALTH SYSTEMS NATIONWIDE

I would love to expand this type of program to other geographic locations because our patients don’t only come from Washtenaw area but also in other areas in the state of Michigan.

I do think that it really does take a village.

Video Produced by Chris McElroy, Michigan Media All photos by Eric Bronson, Michigan Photography
By Laura Bailey, Michigan News

ANN ARBOR—For years, Maria Hochendoner of Ann Arbor received conflicting information about her high blood pressure readings. Was it “white coat syndrome”—temporary high blood pressure caused by in-office anxiety—or true hypertension?

"It really does take a village," says Maria Hochendoner, who sees a Meijer community pharmacist for her hypertension

“It really does take a village.”

A 24-hour blood pressure monitor finally put the question to rest: it was indeed hypertension. Hochendoner was bothered by the diagnosis. She’s young, and disliked the idea of taking blood pressure medication for life, so her doctor referred her to a specially trained community pharmacist for a one-on-one consult on her hypertension.

They discussed her diet, exercise and sodium intake, and suggested lifestyle adjustments to help control her blood pressure.

“The pharmacist was helpful in sharing a lot of information that I didn’t know and made me more comfortable with the diagnosis,” Hochendoner said.

Such a consult between patient and pharmacist isn’t a typical way of treating hypertension, but for pharmacists, patients and their physicians who are part of Michigan Medicine’s team-based, comprehensive hypertension control program, it is now routine.

All consultations with Meijer pharmacists in the University of Michigan's community pharmacy program are completely private.

Consultations are completely private

At the core of the program are pharmacists embedded in 14 U-M Medical Group primary care clinics. They work together with physicians to help patients manage high blood pressure in a number of innovative ways.

Patients who need extra help are referred to a clinic pharmacist, and they meet with them in a clinic setting just as they would meet with their primary care physician.

Given the success of the clinic pharmacist team-based model, the program expanded to community pharmacists at Meijer pharmacies, a unique Michigan Medicine partnership that has patients visiting a specially trained pharmacist at one of three Meijer locations in Washtenaw County. It offers an alternative option for patients to have a blood pressure follow-up appointment at a convenient location and time in the community.

Like the clinic pharmacists, the specially trained Meijer pharmacists have access to patient medical records and can document important updates to those charts. In this way, the primary care physician and pharmacists are always in sync with the treatment plan.

Overall, both parts of the program are resulting in a greater number of patients keeping their blood pressure where it should be.

The success of these efforts, which are part of the comprehensive hypertension control program, have been recognized by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as the top team-based hypertension control program nationally.

Alan Tanabe selects a hypertension drug at a Meijer pharmacy. Pharmacists participating in the community program are trained by Michigan Medicine.

Alan Tanabe

The program is led by Hae Mi Choe, U-M Medical Group chief quality officer and associate dean of the U-M College of Pharmacy.

With hypertension affecting one in three adults in the United States and 90 percent of Americans living within five miles of a pharmacy, it only made sense to bring the care closer to the patients, Choe said.

“The pharmacist was helpful in sharing a lot of information that I didn’t know and made me more comfortable with the diagnosis.”

Maria Hochendoner, participant in U-M Medical Group’s hypertension control program through her neighborhood pharmacist

“I would love to expand this type of program to other geographic locations because our patients don’t only come from the Washtenaw area but also from other areas in the state of Michigan,” she said.

For Linda Terrell, medical director of the U-M Briarwood Clinic in Ann Arbor, the program means her hypertension patients have another, often quicker option for care.

For Dr. Linda Terrell, medical director at Ann Arbor's Briarwood clinic, the community pharmacist program has given her hypertension patients another option for care

Linda Terrell

“You can imagine when a physician cares for nearly 2,000 patients of their own they don’t have time to see every patient as often perhaps as they would like,” she said.

The program began in 2009, when the U-M Medical Group placed pharmacists in all of its 14 primary care clinics. These pharmacists don’t dispense medications. They are there as an extension of primary care physicians to focus on medication management for hypertension and other medical conditions.

In 2016, the original clinic pharmacists program expanded to a pilot project to export the program into the community to “bring care closer to patients’ homes,” Choe said. “It did that by bringing these community pharmacists at Meijer stores to join our team.”

By 2017, the medical group had launched a comprehensive hypertension control program that included all clinic and selected Meijer pharmacists. The Meijer pharmacists were trained by the U-M Medical Group to work with physicians and help patients like Hochendoner manage high blood pressure.

Maria Hochendoner talks to a Meijer pharmacist about her hypertension. "You don't feel like you're rushed," she says of the University of Michigan program. "You can ask questions."

“You don’t feel like you’re rushed. You can ask questions.”

For Hochendoner, the access and relationship with the pharmacist eased her mind.

“(The pharmacist) really kind of calmed me and let me know that it was OK, and the things that I am doing, I am doing right, to (be able to) live with it,” she said.

At the beginning of the comprehensive program, only 72 percent of Michigan Medicine’s 40,000-odd hypertension patients met their blood pressure targets. The goal of most health systems was 75 percent in 2018.

Eighteen months after the program began, the number of Michigan Medicine patients meeting their blood pressure targets rose to 78 percent. The new comprehensive approach had worked.

For the next two years, the CDC will evaluate the program with an eye toward developing a model that’s replicable nationally.

Dr. Hae Mi Choe, Chief Quality Officer at the University of Michigan Medical Group

Hae Mi Choe

High blood pressure causes a slew of health problems, and physicians, pharmacists and researchers are always seeking new ways to control it, Choe said. However, unless it’s an extreme case there aren’t obvious symptoms. That’s why it’s important to check blood pressure at every visit, she said.

“If you think about it, there are 40,000 patients in our system who have hypertension, and improving blood pressure control by 1 percent is 400 patients,” said Choe, who also directs pharmacy innovations and partnerships for the medical group. “Budging that many patients by 6 percent is quite an accomplishment.”

Hae Mi Choe

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