Friday, January 27, 2012

Should Counseling Be Billable?




Lawyers charge for talking with them in any sort of legal matter.


Physicians usually refer patients to come in before giving medical advice or any sort if they have not seen the patient recently or haven't addressed the issue in question before.


Most public speakers have an honorarium that they are given for showing up in support of a cause or set fee for their speech.

Nurse advice lines usually have a fee of some sort associated with them. If a problem is beyond their level of expertise they refer you to see a physician or nurse practitioner.


Think about it for a minute. Pharmacists provide essential information on how to take and best use a medication, as well as what to watch for and how to best control the problem being treated. Yet they have no real way of billing for this. Whether it takes one minute or an hour shouldn't there be a way to bill for this? This is a professional service, right? It does take my time away from others who need/desire it, that deserves some compensation right?


Now before anyone says I am being greedy, let me explain my reasoning for this. With ever declining reimbursements from insurance companies and PBM's (I'm looking at you Express Scripts!), a pharmacist has to dispense more and more medications to make a pharmacy financially stable. When the point is reached when a pharmacy can not be financially stable nobody wins, except those that created the scenario such as the PBM's. The reason nobody wins is because no patient safety and the quality of care is compromised to dispense a greater volume in less time. If the quality of care declines, so does the overall health of the nation and what is left is a vicious cycle that defeats the original intent. If patient safety declines then you could end up with more side effects, serious drug interactions and possible harm to patients.


Do you see the issue now?


I think it is despicable that reimbursements have gotten so bad (that's a post for another day) but the fact that pharmacists don't get paid for counseling is down right insulting! I know there are MTM services that we can get compensated for but all patients are not eligible for those. Every patient is eligible for consulting the pharmacist about there medication! I think it's actually mandated they must be at LEAST offered consultation in every state.
So if we must give our professional advice and opinions, why aren't we paid for it? The old argument that this "is our
duty" does not hold any water with me anymore seeing how much reimbursements for dispensing have fallen. How can I do "my duty" if it costs me time that forces me to lose money? I can't give professional advice for $0.40 as some insurance companies have proposed!



The solution could be very simple. Have a simple sheet to sign (or credit card like device) that the patient must sign saying the received consultation from the pharmacist. Include in it a simple time spent slot where the pharmacist and/or patient can fill in before they sign. You have complete documentation of how long the pharmacist spent and can be billed appopriately. I doon't think this will produce the positive results seen in full blown MTM programs however, I do think it would produce some significant difference from those who did not receive counseling. This would only apply to patients who were not eligible for MTM programs (i.e. a patient getting a new antibiotic, a methylprednisolone dose pack, etc.). In many cases, the proper use of these medications is vital to reduce rehospitalizations or follow ups, which in turn saves money while improving care.


This isn't a cure all solution BUT I do feel it is a step in the right direction to improve our healthcare.

-The Pharmer

1 comment:

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