Welcome to the Business of Pharmacy Market Insights Quarterly Newsletter

The newsletter provided was designed with the information and topics you need to know to stay current on hospital and Alternate Site Pharmacy affairs. It delivers easy-to-read insights into the key issues that are top of mind for healthcare leaders right now, and is intended to help you engage in discussion around these issues with potential conversation starters.

New this quarter, you’ll find the newsletter provided both within the context of this email for easier smart phone reading, and attached in PDF version. More links have been embedded to outside sources should you want additional information.

Please note that this document is intended for internal use by McKesson sales staff to assist in speaking to current affairs and should not be distributed to customers.

Highlights in This Issue

Key Metrics
Macroeconomic context remains concerning: low GDP growth, high unemployment, low consumer confidence.
Healthcare spending growth slowest in years.
Healthcare execs focused on cost savings.
Deficit reduction likely to result in lower reimbursement. Long-term questions about hospital revenue.
Capital projects being delayed or cancelled.
Record M&A in healthcare.
Key Topics
Public Policy: Hospitals face realities of reform and ACOs.
Quality and Safety: 6 steps to improve quality and safety.
Supply Chain: 8 common areas of supply utilization misalignment.
Reimbursement: Lower rates, new payment models on the horizon.
Innovation: Advanced technologies transforming healthcare, hospitals, and pharmacies.
Alternate Site Pharmacies: Changes to short-cycle mandate, increased use of specialty drugs, and issues facing customers’ customers.
Deep Dive
Growing crisis related to drug shortages.
Shortages affecting patient safety, creating huge costs for hospitals.
Multiple reasons for shortages.
Hospital pharmacies employing multiple strategies to deal with shortages.
When a drug shortage occurs, pharmacists want information from McKesson about what, when, why, and how long.

Key Metrics
A Snapshot of the Economic and Healthcare Landscape
 
Macroeconomic Snapshot
Recent economic news hasn’t been good. Growth has been low, unemployment remains high, consumer confidence has declined. Business leaders are pessimistic about 2011, but optimistic for 2012.
 
Economic Growth (GDP) remains low
up arrow +1.3% April–June after +0.4% in Jan–Mar
– Economists expect 2–3% growth Jul–Dec, but increasing concerns of a “double dip” recession
 
Unemployment remains high
up arrow 9.1% in July; was 8.9% in April
– Modest job creation in July; firms not hiring
 
Consumer confidence
up arrow 8.9% in Oct–Dec ‘10
– Consumers short-term outlook is pessimistic
CEO confidence is extremely pessimistic
 
Inflation remains low
up arrow 3.6% CPI past 12 mos. (1.6% excluding food & energy)
 
Deficit Reduction Impact
On August 2, Congress raised debt ceiling, agreed to reduce deficit. Long term, impact on healthcare may be significant.
  • $917B in cuts agreed to, no likely impact on healthcare.
  • 12-member “supercommittee” must cut another $1.5T.
  • Cuts in entitlements (i.e. Medicare) are likely. Some experts forecast cuts up to 6%.
  • If supercommittee can’t agree, triggers occur, including 2% reduction in Medicare payments.
On August 5, S&P downgraded U.S.’s credit rating, lowered ratings on thousands of municipal bonds.
  • Even before these downgrades, 42% of hospitals anticipated difficulty accessing capital in 2011 and many capital projects were delayed or eliminated.
  • Healthcare bond ratings weren’t immediately affected.
  • Longer term, there may be an effect on bond ratings (lowered) and interest rates (increased).
  • On Aug. 10, Moody’s reported that reimbursement cuts could reduce hospitals’ revenues.
For more information from McKesson’s SVP Public Affairs, Ann Berkey, click here.
 
Healthcare Snapshot
Rate of healthcare spending is slowing, causing hospitals to focus on controlling costs and prepare to become an ACO. Deficit reducing is likely to decrease reimbursement rates.
 
Healthcare spending
up arrow +4.7% Jan–Apr 2011 vs. 2010
– Low growth rates versus historical averages
– But still growing 2–3 times faster than inflation
 
CEO/CFO Priorities
  Top priorities of healthcare leaders:
– Cost reduction, quality/patient safety, reimbursement
 
Hospital cost drivers
up arrow 60% Wages and Benefits
14.2% Other Products (e.g. food, medical instruments
9.3% Professional Fees
5.9% Prescription Drugs
11.1% Other Services
Source: AHA Trendwatch 3/11
 
Healthcare M&A (Mergers and Acquisitions)
up arrow Record healthcare M&A
M&A in all industry segments
86% of hospital execs expect M&A to increase
 
Possible Conversation Starters
  • What are your organization’s top priorities over the next 12 months?
  • With revenues and balance sheets under pressure, what are your top focus areas to control costs? What is the pharmacy doing to control costs?
  • Some organizations are looking at new revenue sources through outpatient/ambulatory pharmacy enhancement. Is optimizing your outpatient pharmacy on your radar?
  • What are your organization’s major initiatives? Major projects and investments?

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Key Topics
Topic 1: Public Policy/Healthcare Reform

Reality is setting in as healthcare execs realize that the Affordable Care Act (ACA) requires significant operational changes, and will differ from state to state. Execs are focused on cost savings and becoming an ACO.

 
Hospital Execs Accepting Reform Realities
  • Attendees at American College of Healthcare Executives conference realize they haven’t done enough to prepare for ACA implementation.
  • Execs must dramatically change their operations.
  • Execs are focused on: reducing costs, decreasing errors and readmissions, improving quality, reengineering care delivery.
  • Execs need to prepare to move away from fee-for-service payment.
 
Huge Variation in How States Are Implementing ACA
  • Much of ACA’s implementation takes place at the state level.
  • States have flexibility in deciding what to implement, how, and how fast.
  • One analyst categorizes states as:
    • Active implementers: California, New York, Maryland, and New England states are creating health insurance exchanges and implementing other aspects of ACA.
    • Passive-aggressive implementers: These states dislike ACA but are still preparing to implement it. This includes many southern states.
    • “On hold” states: More than 20 states have raised legal challenges to ACA. (In early August one court declared the individual mandate unconstitutional.) Governors in several states, like Florida, are placing implementation on hold, hoping the Supreme Court or 2012 election keeps them from having to implement ACA. If the Supreme Court upholds ACA and if President Obama is reelected, these states will have only a few months to comply.
    • Not implementing: Some states, like Oklahoma, disagree with the legislation and have no plans to implement it.
 
Tremendous Activity Around ACOs
  • In March HHS issued proposed regulations on Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs).
  • ACOs are a new delivery model where providers coordinate care delivery.
  • ACOs are a new payment model where providers can receive “shared savings” for high-quality, lower-cost care.
  • ACOs will be required to report extensive quality and cost data.
  • 64% of healthcare organizations plan to become an ACO, 39% before 2013.
  • 72% of healthcare leaders think ACOs will improve clinical integration; 62% think ACOs will improve quality.
  • Becoming an ACO is driving M&A.
 
Possible Conversation Starters
  • What impact do you believe healthcare reform will have on your organization?
  • What changes is your organization making because of healthcare reform? Does the organization have an EMR strategy? How will pharmacy support the strategy?
  • What are you considering as you prepare for stage 2 of meaningful use? What is your philosophy of barcoded medication?
  • Does your organization plan to become an ACO? Where are you in the process?
  • How will becoming an ACO impact your pharmacy operations? Are you considering all of the revenue opportunities of an ambulatory pharmacy?

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Key Topics
Topic 2: Quality and Patient Safety

Quality and safety are priorities for healthcare leaders, are getting significant attention and investment, and are increasingly affecting a hospital’s bottom line.

 
Quality & Safety are Priorities in Most Hospitals
  • 43% of healthcare leaders rank quality/safety their #1 priority; 48% rank it their 2nd through 5th priority.
  • 53% of organizations are investing more in patient safety programs.
 
Improving Quality/Safety Can Impact the Bottom Line

Execs are focused on quality/safety because it can affect their bottom line.

  • Shared savings as an ACO and pay-for-performance programs reward providers for achieving quality benchmarks.
  • Providers will receive reduced reimbursements and penalties for high readmissions.
  • Quality can affect a hospital’s insurance cost. One Illinois hospital lowered its insurance from $11.5 million in 2006 to $2.4 million in 2010 because of improved quality and patient satisfaction.
  • bullet
 
Hospitals Are Taking Steps to Improve Quality/Safety

Hospitals are approaching quality/safety improvement from many angles.

  • Philosophy. They see safety and quality as part of their vision, philosophy, and culture.
  • Leadership. Improving quality requires strong leadership commitment and support, which may be driven by a hospital’s CEO or a clinical team, which can include pharmacy.
  • Process. Many hospitals are implementing Six Sigma, Lean, or Toyota methodologies to decrease defects and improve quality.
  • Measurement. Improving quality requires benchmarking, setting goals, measuring results, and holding everyone accountable.
  • Technology. 89% of healthcare leaders believe electronic health records and other IT systems will improve quality and safety. One hospital that implemented electronic medication verification systems reduced medical errors 5% over five years.
  • Focus. Hospitals are concentrating on specific areas like reducing readmissions, decreasing length of stay, and having fewer patients experience infections.
 
HHS Has Launch New Safety Initiatives

HHS has unveiled two new programs focused on quality and safety:

  • National Strategy for Quality Improvement in Health Care. This creates national aims and priorities to improve quality in the U.S.
  • Patient Safety Initiative. This is a $1 billion collaborative program to reduce preventable hospital-acquired infections by 40% and preventable complications from care transitions by 20%.
 
Possible Conversation Starters
  • What specific quality/safety metrics is your organization focused on?
  • What major programs, initiatives, and technology is your organization implementing?
  • How do you plan to track these initiatives?
  • How do these programs/initiatives affect pharmacy? What role does pharmacy play in these programs and initiatives?

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Key Topics
Topic 3: Supply Chain

Industry analysts see significant cost-savings opportunities in healthcare supply chains. Opportunities include improved processes, security, and automation; barcoding and RFID have much potential.

 
Opportunity Exists to Wring Savings from Supply Chains
  • Materials costs represent 30–40% of a hospital’s operating expenses. (Curt - can we look at showing this and other such numbers creatively, i.e. making the numbers pop in BoP style)
  • In most organizations, there are opportunities to decrease supply chain costs.
  • One approach for savings: “supply utilization management.” This focuses on eliminating waste, inefficiency, and misuse.
  • An article in Healthcare Financial Management (HFM) identified eight areas where supply utilization management can yield savings:
    • Reassess standardization to promote flexibility to use lower-priced options.
    • Evaluate over-specification to stop purchasing products with unnecessary features.
    • Find instances of under-specification to stop using the wrong product for a task, thereby increasing costs.
    • Decrease the number of hand-offs which wastes time in 34% of a hospital’s activities.
    • See the big picture to understand the financial and clinical impact of purchasing decisions.
    • Identify value mismatches to find lower-cost functional alternatives.
    • Evaluate the performance of new technologies to ensure they meet specifications and warrant the costs.
    • Replace “expired” technologies to cut repair costs on equipment at the end of its life.
 
Automation is the Future of Healthcare Supply Chains
  • Industries (i.e. retail) have used technologies such as UPC codes to save billions.
  • Healthcare lacks uniform product identifiers (except for pharmaceutical products). Only 16% of materials processed in healthcare use barcodes and only 10% have RFID.
  • A potential solution: global standard identifiers for healthcare products (GTINs) and locations (GLNs). Currently 76% of supply chain organizations are adopting GLNs.
  • Standard identifiers can lead to implementation of automated solutions.
  • The best opportunities for automation in the healthcare supply chain are barcoding and RFID.
  • Automation can produce significant cost savings and gains in patient safety.
 
The FDA is Focused on a Drug Track-and-Trace System
  • Goal: Secure the supply chain against counterfeiting and diversion.
  • The FDA is looking at interoperability, authentication, and data management.
  • Pharmacists want track-and-trace systems to be interoperable with existing pharmacy systems and integrated with their workflow.
  • Technologies that can improve the security of the pharmaceutical supply chain are barcodes and RFID.
 
Possible Conversation Starters
  • What opportunities for savings do you see in your supply chain?
  • What supply chain technologies have you implemented or will be implementing? What aspects of your supply chain have you automated?
  • What are your organization’s major supply chain priorities and initiatives?
  • Is your pharmacy considering integration opportunities to streamline operations?

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Key Topics
Topic 4: Reimbursement

The focus of healthcare reform is covering 32 million uninsured people, but it also includes profound changes in reimbursement. New payment models are coming, which will force providers to change how they deliver care.

 
Of Concern to Providers: Lower Reimbursement
  • Short term: If deficit reduction subcommittee can’t agree on cuts by Thanksgiving, automatic triggers could reduce Medicare payments to providers by up to 2%.
  • Longer term: Payment models will undergo significant changes, with consequences for providers.
  • Medicare reimbursement is likely to be cut and there is uncertainty about future rates since entitlement programs will be cut to reduce the deficit.
  • Also, many private payers (providers’ most profitable customers) link their rates to Medicare.
  • And healthcare reform will mean an increasing number of low-profit/unprofitable Medicaid patients.
 
New Payment Models Provide Longer-Term Upside Potential

These new models include:

  • Shared savings. ACOs may share in savings by meeting quality benchmarks and lowering the cost of care.
  • Bundled payment. One lump-sum payment for services related to a procedure or episode of care, i.e. knee replacement.
  • Value-based purchasing. In April, CMS announced final Medicare rules to pay providers based on performance. Beginning in fiscal 2013, hospital reimbursement will be cut by 1%. Those funds will be used to reward performance. Performance will be weighted 70% based on 12 clinical measures and 30% based on patient experience measures.

    Provider groups like the American Hospital Association support the concept of value-based purchasing but have concerns about the final CMS rules.

The above models are all related to Medicare; however, many private payers are already incorporating elements of these models into provider contracts.

These new payment models, which place emphasis on quality and measurement, will force providers to reengineer how they deliver care.

 
Payers Will Use Reimbursement to Drive Delivery Changes

In announcing new payment rules, CMS Administrator Don Berwick stated:

  • In 2009, CMS spent $4.4 billion for patients injured in hospitals.
  • CMS spent $26 billion on readmissions, many of which were unnecessary.
  • New payment policies incent hospitals to deliver better care and penalize those that don’t.
 
There will be significant reimbursement experimentation
  • The federal government plans numerous demonstration projects of innovative reimbursement models
  • States and private payers are also experimenting with different models
  • Different reimbursement models will drive delivery system changes, which could change the role of pharmacy departments and pharmacists
 
Possible Conversation Starters
  • What are the expectations of your organization for reimbursement changes over the next 12 months?
  • How will you address lowering readmission rates?
  • Have you looked at your pharmacy as a means to track the continuum of care?
  • How prepared is your organization for changes in payment models?
  • How might pharmacy be impacted by reimbursement changes?

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Key Topics
Topic 5: Innovation

Innovations, particularly those that leverage new technologies, are transforming how health system pharmacies operate.

 
Hospitals Are Innovating Through Process Improvement
  • 30–40% of all healthcare spending is wasted.
  • To reduce wasteful spending, hospitals are improving processes.
  • One study found that 53% of hospitals have a Lean initiative and 42% use Six Sigma.
  • However, just 4% of these hospitals fully deploy these process-improvement initiatives.
 
Hospital Pharmacies Are Using Technology to Innovate

Pharmacies are leveraging technology to innovate in multiple ways.

  • Automated pharmacy. The University of California San Francisco (UCSF) is adopting an automated pharmacy with advanced robotics, along with bedside barcoding, electronic medical records, and electronic order entry.

    Through May 2011, this automated pharmacy picking system had filled 400,000 doses with zero order-fill errors; technician picking would have generated 400 to 4,000 errors. A new automated sterile-fill operation is expected to save $2 million per year and improve compliance.
  • Paperless pharmacy. Arizona’s Tucson Medical Center has achieved the highest level of EMR adoption and has gone paperless. The EMR is integrated with:
    • Clinical decision-support tools to check for drug-drug, drug-food, and drug-lab conflicts.
    • A closed-loop medication administration system with CPOE.
    • Unit dose barcoding and bedside barcode verification.
    • A smart pump system, which is being integrated to improve dose verification. Smart pumps enable producing IV solutions “on demand” instead of in batches, which has saved $3 million in 2 years.

Integration with the EMR has decreased the time from when a physician orders a medication to when it is released to the patient; 70% of MD orders are electronically released to patients in 5 minutes or less.

 
Innovative Technologies Will Transform Healthcare

The keynote speaker at the American College of Healthcare Executives (Dr. Eric Topol) sees multiple innovations transforming healthcare:

  • Social media is changing the relationship between patients and doctors. Patients can be part of online communities.
  • Wireless technologies enable information to be captured real-time about a patient’s health status, and data can be transmitted to clinicians. An individual can receive a warning on their smartphone.
  • Sensors can be embedded in pills to track medication use by patients.
  • Genomics will enable personalized medicine and result in drugs only being prescribed when they are certain to be effective for a particular patient.
 
Possible Conversation Starters
  • What innovative technologies are being implemented at your facility? In your pharmacy?
  • What is your hospital’s EMR strategy? How will the pharmacy play a role?
  • What impact do you expect these innovative technologies to have?
  • What innovations will have the greatest impact on how pharmacies operate over the next few years?

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Key Topics
Topic 6: Alternate Site Pharmacy

Revisions to short-cycle rules for LTC provide pharmacies more time to prepare, but much planning is still required. LTC pharmacies have opportunities, like specialty drugs and MTM, and are working to decrease rehospitalizations.

 
LTC Facts and Figures
  • U.S. long-term care is a $258 billion market. Demand is strong and the outlook is positive. Market growth of 5–6% is expected each of the next 5 years.
  • Occupancy in nursing homes was 88.5% in Jan–Mar 2011, with regional variation.
 
LTC Pharmacy Facts and Figures
  • According to research firm MHS, most LTC pharmacies operate 6 days/week, are open 9-10 hours/day, and service 25 or fewer facilities in 1 state.
  • The “typical” LTC resident receives 4 branded prescriptions,
    5 generic prescriptions, and 3-5 OTC prescriptions
  • From October 2009 to September 2010 there was a 5% decrease in the number of LTC pharmacies servicing 2,000 or fewer residents and a 5% increase in those servicing 3,000 to 6,000 residents
 
CMS Revises Short-Cycle Rules for LTC

CMS has revised the rules related to short-cycle dispensing in LTC.

  • Short-cycle fill was mandated in ACA to reduce pharmaceutical waste.
  • Instead of 7-day fills, LTC pharmacies and facilities will be allowed fill cycles of up to 14 days.
  • Implementation has been pushed back to January 1, 2013.
  • Pharmacies no longer have to take back unused medications for credit and reuse or disposal.
  • Pharmacies have to collect data on drugs not used by LTC residents and report it to Part D plans.
  • These changes will create costs and require process changes for LTC pharmacies.
 
CMS is Considering MTM for LTC
  • CMS is considering new regulations where LTC facilities would provide beneficiaries with medication therapy management (MTM) beyond the already mandated monthly medication regimen review (MRR).
  • ASCP sees this as a positive in promoting MTM.
  • But ASCP believes CMS needs to establish criteria for who would benefit from MTM.
  • Regulations may require Part D plans to contract directly with LTC facilities, which ASCP disagrees with; ASCP wants LTC facilities to contract consultant pharmacists for MTM.
 
Specialty Pharma is a Growth Opportunity for LTC Pharmacies
  • Many LTC pharmacies see specialty pharma as a big growth opportunity.
  • Specialty pharma has grown 5X the rate of traditional drugs; growth of more than 10% per year is projected.
  • Drivers of growth are: increased use of specialty drugs to manage chronic diseases; increased costs of specialty drugs, rapid growth of new products.
 
Possible Conversation Starters
  • What is your reaction to the new short-cycle rules? What impact will they have on your business?
  • What opportunities might MTM represent for your business?
  • What role might your pharmacy play in reducing hospitalizations?
  • Have you considered specializing in a few select disease states?

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Deep Dive
Dealing with Drug Shortages

The United States is experiencing the most severe drug shortages in decades. These shortages are affecting the quality and cost of healthcare. Provided is a summary of the problem, its causes, and what actions directors of pharmacy are taking.

 
The Problem

After 58 drug shortages in 2004, there were more than 200 in 2010 and could be more than 350 in 2011. In a June 2011 survey by the American Hospital Association, 99.5% of hospitals reported experiencing at least one drug shortage in the past six months; 44% reported 21 or more shortages.

Among large hospitals, 47% experienced 30 or more shortages. Almost 50% of hospitals experience drug shortages on a daily basis. As shown below, shortages are occurring across all treatment categories. Directors of pharmacy see this as a long-term problem that will last for years.

 
What’s Behind These Shortages?

Multiple reasons are cited for the rash of shortages, some of which are persistent and some arise unpredictably. Reasons include:

  • Manufacturing and supply chain issues. Shortages occur when drug manufacturers have capacity constraints, use the same production lines for multiple products, or experience manufacturing or distribution disruptions. An area with frequent shortages has been sterile injectables, where there is a lack of manufacturing capacity.
  • Supply & demand issues. Changes in clinical practice or emergencies can unexpectedly boost demand for a drug, which can occur without a corresponding increase in supply.
  • Business decisions. Many shortages occur because a manufacturer decides to no longer produce a product. Because of market consolidation, there may not be suppliers to pick up the slack.
  • Raw material shortages. About 80% of the raw materials in pharmaceuticals come from outside the U.S. Raw materials can be degraded or contaminated; global supply chains can be disrupted; and there can be import restrictions.
  • Regulatory issues. With drug safety a higher priority for the FDA, inspections and enforcement can result in recalls, plant shutdowns, and production delays.
  • Unknown. Frequently, the drivers of shortages are unknown.
 
Strategies Pharmacies Are Using

In reviewing articles and speaking with directors of pharmacy, the following strategies were cited:

  • Monitoring. Pharmacy departments are investing time and resources to closely monitor potential shortages. Pharmacists expressed frustration that there is not one “go-to” resource for shortage information. As a result, they must constantly look at multiple sources.
  • Forming multidisciplinary response teams. Pharmacies have created teams that frequently (often weekly, sometimes daily) review drugs with shortages, assess the situation, and develop strategies. This can include identifying alternatives, changing the formulary, modifying care processes, and developing a plan of action. In some instances, the plan can involve rationing, which 80% of hospitals have done.
  • Increasing inventory. At the earliest sign of a shortage, pharmacies increase their inventory of a drug. The AHA survey showed that 89% of hospitals have added inventory for important drugs or changed par levels. Some pharmacies have purchased gray-market products.
  • Communicating. Directors of pharmacy must communicate the situation and their plan with medical staff and the C-suite. Medical staff must be informed of a shortage, and any changes in products, guidelines, or procedures. Pharmacy directors say C-suite executives are generally supportive, but physicians and medical staff are often angry, blaming the pharmacy for shortages.
 
Impact on Hospitals and Pharmacies

Hospitals and pharmacies are experiencing significant financial and non-financial impacts.

  • Adverse outcomes. There are often:
    • No alternatives. For many drugs, there is no alternative.
    • Delays. 82% of hospitals have delayed treatment because of a drug shortage, and patients have received less effective and non-recommended treatments.
    • Safety issues. Using substitutes can result in dosing and administration errors and side effects.
  • Altered relationships. In a survey by ISMP (Institute for Safe Medication Practices), 55% of respondents have experienced physician anger towards pharmacists and nurses in response to a drug shortage.
  • Increased costs. A Premier study estimates increased hospital costs of $200 million from drug shortages. These costs include increased staffing expenses to monitor and deal with shortages. Some pharmacy directors have 1 or 2 FTEs focused on drug shortages, costing the pharmacy thousands of dollars.
    Increased costs are also attributable to: spending more on drugs where there is a shortage (92% of hospitals), high costs for alternatives (more than 75% of hospitals), and costs for maintaining high inventory (85% of hospitals).
 
What Pharmacists Want: Information

Pharmacists are well versed on the reasons for drug shortages. They understand that the issue lies with manufacturers, not wholesalers and distributors. Most pharmacists are focused on finding immediate solutions and value any assistance that McKesson can provide. One customer said his approach is, “To make pharmacy seen as the solution, not the problem.”

Customers are hungry for timely information. They want to know:

  • When a shortage exists
  • The reason for the shortageis (is a shortage due to lack of an ingredient, or has the manufacturer discontinued the product?)
  • How long the shortage is estimated to last (they want to know if they should develop a 2-week plan, or a 2- month plan)

This information (available to MHS Sales in McKesson Connect) will help pharmacists as they work to rapidly develop their plans to deal with the shortage of a drug. Not receiving information can cause customers to feel frustrated. (An AHA survey found that 67% of hospitals say they are never or rarely informed of a drug shortage’s cause and 56% are never or rarely informed of a shortage’s expected duration.)

These shortages are not McKesson’s fault; they are manufacturing issues. But, responding to customers as quickly as possible with the information they need will be seen as valuable as they work to formulate a solution.

 
Additional Resources
 
Possible Conversation Starters
  • What are the most significant drug shortages you have experienced?
  • How have you dealt with these shortages? What actions have you taken?
  • What organizational structures and processes have you put in place to deal with the drug shortage crisis?
  • Are you communicating with other hospitals and health systems in your area to leverage support?

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Sources

AHA and AHA News.com
www.ahanews.com

American College of Healthcare Executives
http://www.ache.org/

American Medical News
www.ama-assn.org/amednews

American Society of Heath-System Pharmacists
www.ashp.org

Becker’s Hospital Review
www.beckershospitalreview.com

The Bond Buyer
http://www.bondbuyer.com/

Bureau of Economic Analysis
www.bea.gov

Bureau of Labor Statistics
http://www.bls.gov/

Centers for Disease Control
www.cdc.gov

The Conference Board
http://www.conference-board.org

Drug Topics
http://drugtopics.modernmedicine.com/

The Food and Drug Administration
www.fda.gov

Healthcare Finance News
www.healthcarefinancenews.com

Healthcare Financial Management Association
www.hfma.org

HealthLeaders
www.healthleadersmedia.com

Hospitals & Health Networks
www.hhnmag.com

The Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP)
www.ismp.org

Long-Term Living Magazine
www.ltlmagazine.com

Managed Health Care Associates
www.mhainc.com

McKnight’s Long Term Care News & Assisted Living
www.mcknights.com

Modern Healthcare
www.modernhealthcare.com

Moodys
www.moodys.com

Morningstar
www.morningstar.com

National Journal
www.nationaljournal.com

PwC
www.pwc.com

S&P Healthcare Economic Composition Index
http://www.standardandpoors.com/indices/sp-healthcare-economic-indices/en/us/?indexId=sp-healthcare-economic-indices

Thomson Reuters Healthcare Index
healthcarescience.thomsonreuters.com/indexes

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
www.hhs.gov

Wall St. Journal
www.wsj.com

The Washington Post
www.washingtonpost.com

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