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Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System Charles F. Caley, Pharm.D., BCPP Associate Clinical Professor University of Connecticut.

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Presentation on theme: "Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System Charles F. Caley, Pharm.D., BCPP Associate Clinical Professor University of Connecticut."— Presentation transcript:

1 Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System Charles F. Caley, Pharm.D., BCPP Associate Clinical Professor University of Connecticut

2 I NTRODUCTION

3 Mental Illness on Campus u American College Health Survey  Top 10 health problems during academic year Depression17.8% Anxiety12.4% SAD8.1%  Top 10 health impediments to academic performance Depr/SAD/Anx15.7% N = 94,806 completed surveysJ Am College Health 2007;55(4):195–206.

4 N = 939 UMich students completed surveysNASPA Journal 2006;43(3):410–31. College Student Mental Hlth Survey Psychiatric Diagnosis by Student Self-Report

5 D ESCRIPTION OF S ERVICE

6 20,000 students at the University of Connecticut Approximately 6,000 visits to CMHS annually Two 0.5 FTE psychiatrists, one APRN, seven therapists

7 Psychiatric Pharmacist Services u Consultation w/ patient record review / pt interview / written note in chart u Consultation w/ record review and discussion with APRN u Education  Direct to patient  Weekly APRN meetings  Staff inservices  Drug information questions

8 Project Chronology October 2006 November 2006 January 2007 (Weekly APRN meetings begin) (Inservice on mechanisms of drug intolerability given) (Psychiatric pharmacist pilot project begins) May 2007 (End pilot project; results presented; report to administrations submitted) July 2007 (Agreement to continue service and to compensate financially is made) September 2007 (Continue psychiatric pharmacy services to present)

9 I MPACT ON P ATIENT C ARE

10 Results u 27 patients consulted on to date  18–42 yrs ( mean = 24)  Predominantly female  Presenting w/ depression &/or anxiety spectrum  Typically not responding or not tolerating current tx  Most receive “full consult”  Recommendations implemented in 88% of cases

11 Results u Consultations by type of recommendation  Change dose8 (30%)  Change medication7 (26%)  Start new medication6 (22%)  Patient education6 (22%)  No changes to tx plan2 (7%)  Recommend adj. psychotherapy1 (4%)

12 Staff Education u Weekly APRN Meetings  Clinical pharmacology  Pk drug–drug interactions  Psychotropic adverse effect profiles  Pharmacotherapeutic selection process u SHS Inservices  Mechanisms of drug intolerance  Drug interactions btwn common Rxs and common OTCs  Serotonin syndrome review and update

13 u Clinical credibility firmly established  Patients willing to: Accept / implement tx recommendations Be taught about their meds and illnesses  Patients gave positve feedback to APRNs  APRNS, psychiatrists, therapists, CMHS director, SHS director High rate of implementing recommendations u Clinical outcomes beyond implementation Results

14 u To maintain service funding  Explore additional avenues for billing / funding u Obtain outcome data  Symptom severity change  CMHS service use  Academic performance  Patient satisfaction u Campus outreach u Present project results at annual ACHA in June Future

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