First-of-its-kind tool enables regional comparisons of pharmacist services, allowing policymakers to plan health services more effectively
Researchers at the University of Toronto’s Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy have launched an interactive atlas that provides a snapshot of pharmacist services across Ontario.
The Ontario Pharmacy Evidence Network (OPEN) Interactive Atlas Tool is the first-of-its-kind in Canada to enable regional comparisons, helping policy-makers plan pharmacist services more effectively.
“This tool is arriving at a critical time for decision-makers,” said Suzanne Cadarette, associate professor at the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, and lead scientist and author of the atlas tool. “It describes the evolution of community pharmacy practice in Ontario, can be used as a guide for the expansion of pharmacist service delivery across Canada, and may help health services delivery pivot in the face of external factors, including the COVID-19 pandemic.”
The Ontario Government began funding several professional pharmacist services in 2007, starting with MedsCheck, a program that remunerates pharmacies for completing medication reviews among patients with diabetes or taking three or more medications for chronic diseases.
The Ontario Government now also funds programs in which pharmacists communicate with prescribers regarding drug therapy-related problems (Pharmaceutical Opinion program), provide smoking cessation counselling services, administer influenza immunizations and provide COVID-19 testing.
In the initial research brief — published this week in the Canadian Pharmacists Journal — the authors describe how the OPEN Interactive Atlas Tool enables a comprehensive analysis of trends and regional differences in professional pharmacist health services delivery.
Using interactive data visualization software, the researchers display large-scale health care administrative data from 2007 to the most recently available date, then manipulate it based on region, calendar year, sex and age. For example, users can click forward or backward by influenza season to compare influenza immunization delivery over time, or play a video loop of the change in flu vaccine delivery by region.
With these features, the researchers found that more women than men aged 65 or older receive influenza immunizations, yet immunization rates are higher among older men.
Future research briefs for each service are in development that will provide broader context across Canada. Cadarette’s research team urges other provinces and territories to consider creating similar descriptive atlases of pharmacy services as a starting point for discussion, collaboration and education.
“Community pharmacists are one of the most accessible primary health-care professionals, providing a wide variety of evidence-based care. As such, the utility of a pan-Canadian tool would be tremendous,” said Ross Tsuyuki, professor and chair of the department of pharmacology in the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Alberta. He is also Editor-in-Chief of the Canadian Pharmacists Journal.
With additional funding, Cadarette hopes to update the Atlas annually. Her team is also working on an initial descriptive analysis of the impact of COVID-19 on the delivery of professional pharmacist services.
The OPEN Interactive Atlas Tool was funded by the Ontario Pharmacy Evidence Network (OPEN) program peer-reviewed Health Service Research Fund, the Ontario Government, and the Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy.
View the OPEN Interactive Atlas Tool.
More News
Image
Faces of PharmSci: Cheyenne Matinnia
Clinical Pharmacist and MSc student Cheyenne Matinnia's research focuses on the role of conflict in pharmacy education. While conflict training is well-established in other healthcare fields, it remains largely unexplored for pharmacy students.
Read More
Image
New student award established to recognize leadership in medication safety
Andrew’s Living Legacy Award will support pharmacy students who demonstrate exceptional commitment to medication safety.
Read More
Image
Faces of PharmSci: Stephanie Skalitzky
MSc student Stephanie Skalitzky in the Piquette-Miller lab is exploring whether nutrient supplements can safely prevent inflammation-related issues with placental drug transporters, benefiting maternal and child health.
Read More