We’ve finally stepped off the curb and are moving full speed ahead with our CPOE implementation. As a result I spent quite a bit of time last week with our Siemens assigned CPOE consultant. He’s a pharmacist which makes things nice because we understand each other and speak the same language.
The goal of one of the meetings I attended last week was to discuss the resources necessary to implement a CPOE system. Needless to say the project is going to be resource heavy. When it came time to tease out the IT pharmacist part of the project I was a little surprised at what I heard. The time requirements weren’t surprising – several hundred hours – but where the pharmacist fits into the entire scheme was.
Are you ready? Wait for it…wait for it… The pharmacist’s job is to manually build the CPOE drug formulary using a spreadsheet. After all the preaching I’ve done in regards to what an informatics pharmacist should and should not be doing, it was all I could do not to laugh out loud when the Siemens consultant laid out the work plan for the CPOE project.
You see, the pharmacy drug master, a.k.a. formulary, drug dictionary, etc. is manually dropped into a Microsoft Excel spreadsheet and the pharmacist is supposed to spend several hundred hours making it “easier for the doctors to read” and adding several fields that don’t already exist in the pharmacy system. It seems that the Siemens Pharmacy System and Siemens CPOE System aren’t well integrated. While we can interface the drug dictionaries following the initial upload we cannot simply use the pharmacy drug dictionary for the CPOE system.
I can’t tell you the number of times that the pharmacist looked at me during a work session and said “when you’re working the spreadsheet…â€. Stop laughing, it’s not funny. Ok, it is kind of funny, but stop laughing anyway.
It’s going to be difficult for informatics pharmacists to broaden their scope as long as vendors see them as little more than tools for data entry. Then again maybe I’m the one who has it all wrong. I’m just sayin’.
My thoughts on pharmacy informatics can be found in several places on this site.
- Where is pharmacy informatics headed (July 1, 2009) – “Many IT pharmacists are involved in much more mundane tasks such as maintaining pharmacy formularies or creating and maintaining billing reports. Calls to investigate “printer problems†or reset forgotten passwords are not uncommon. Many of these issues certainly do not require the knowledge base of an IT pharmacist and often times pull them away from other important tasks.”
- View on technology-enabled practice from ASHP (August 27, 2009) – In reference to an article1 in AJHP “Turning these ideas into reality will be challenging. As a group, pharmacy has been unable to make significant changes to their practice setting for more than 30 years. I have no idea why, but it is a serious problem. Without forceful leadership pharmacy will be using the same practice model for another 30 years and nobody wants that.â€
- Use of pharmacy informatics resources in hospital pharmacist (November 17, 2009) – In reference to an article2 in AJHP that took a look at the use of pharmacy informatics in approximately 200 hospitals across the US. “Any facility serious about taking advantage of pharmacy technology, informatics and automation has no choice but to consider the services of a pharmacy informatics specialist.†I still believe that, although what role they will play remains uncertain.
- Requirements for a pharmacy informatics professional (December 14, 2009) – “I can teach anyone how to maintain a system. What I can’t do is teach someone logic and how to be intelligent and forward thinking. In my humble opinion, [employers are] looking at [hiring practices] all wrong. Focus on the key components and forget about the system requirements. If you happen to get it, great; don’t go looking for it.â€
- Confusion and varying opinions regarding the role of pharmacy in informatics remains the norm (July 20, 2010) –  “Pharmacy informaticists should be intricately involved in making sure that systems are designed to include pharmacy workflow, that reports being written provide the necessary information to be clinically relevant, that current clinical standards are adhered to during implementation of new systems, be the representative at the table during discussions of integration and interoperability of hospital systems, provide insight into new systems that can help pharmacists enjoy more freedom from the pharmacy and so on. What they shouldn’t be is the guy sitting in a room plugging away at a spreadsheet all day or fixing the fax machine when it breaks.†Now you know why I almost laughed out loud.
- Technology-enabled practice: A vision statement by the ASHP Section of Pharmacy Informatics and Technology Am J Health Syst Pharm 2009; 66: 1573-1577
- Use of pharmacy informatics resources by clinical pharmacy services in acute care Am J Health Syst Pharm 2009; 66: 1934-1938
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