The Latest Collaboration
The ANF/ASHP Foundation’s Collaborative Care Grant for Nurses and Pharmacists, established in 2021, was most recently awarded to Virginia Commonwealth University’s Dana Burns, DNP, FNP-BC, BC-ADM, and Evan M. Sisson, PharmD, MSHA, BCACP, CDCES. They’re investigating the Comprehensive Overweight/Obesity Management Pre-Kidney Transplant (COMPKT) Program.
Roughly 30% of VCU Health System patients who are slated for a kidney transplant have their evaluation delayed because their body mass index (BMI) is too high to meet eligibility criteria, according to the health system.
Burns and Sisson’s project team — clinical pharmacist, a family nurse practitioner, and a dietitian in the VCU Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism — will “create a treatment program to reduce a patient’s BMI using medications for weight loss, patient education, and technology tools for making healthy lifestyle choices,” the ANF release stated.
“There are many unique aspects of this program,” Sisson said. “By capitalizing on interprofessional expertise, this innovative collaboration combines patient education and biofeedback to promote weight loss. The goal is to not only improve the chances for people to receive a lifesaving organ, but also to decrease morbidity and mortality related to excess weight after transplantation.”
The study is expected to take 18 months, including creation and patient evaluation.
Where We’ve Seen Collaborative Care Before
Several studies have investigated the correlation between collaborative care among nurses and pharmacists and an increase in patient outcomes.
Most recently, a study protocol published in March 2024 in “Addiction Science and Clinical Practice” discussed plans to explore this dynamic in relation to treating opioid use disorder. Pharmacists, according to the study, are “well-positioned” to increase their role beyond consultations and be more directly involved across the “continuum of care” as it relates to opioid use.
A 2017 “Journal for Nurse Practitioners” report argued that improvements are needed when it comes to managing medication in primary care, and pharmacists are well-equipped to do just that.
“Pharmacists have generally partnered and collaborated with physicians to provide comprehensive medication management. Care provided to the patient in the context of a physician-pharmacist partnership has resulted in decreased overall costs and improved care based on multiple outcomes,” the report stated.
Three years earlier, the same journal published a study on collaboration between family nurse practitioners and pharmacists for medication counseling with diabetic patients.
Medication regimens were reviewed by a pharmacist, with suggested change implemented by the NP, with noted improvements in A1C levels six months later.
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