• Hospital pharmacy · Dec 1992

    The economic impact of clinical pharmacists' unsolicited recommendations.

    • N Torok and G Brown.
    • St. Paul's Hospital, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
    • Hosp Pharm. 1992 Dec 1; 27 (12): 1052-3, 1056-8, 1060.

    AbstractClinical pharmacists in a 580-bed teaching hospital reported all targeted recommendations that occurred during a 5-month evaluation period. Five types of clinical recommendations were identified: (1) to start drug therapy, (2) to stop drug therapy, (3) to increase drug dose, (4) to decrease drug dose, and (5) to suggest alternative drug therapy. Two thousand sixty-four unsolicited, accepted recommendations were submitted to the investigator by approximately eight holders of full-time equivalent positions dedicated to clinical pharmacy services during the evaluation period. Three hundred forty-four recommendations were selected (every sixth submitted recommendation) and evaluated for their economic impact. The costs of drugs, monitoring, and treatment for the drug regimens were compared before and after each recommendation. Three classes of drugs (antineoplastics, anti-infectives, and gastrointestinal agents) contributed more than 90% of the economic impact. The net economic impact of the evaluated recommendations was a cost saving of $4636.06; this extrapolated to a net cost saving of $34.10 per pharmacist-day.

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