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Pharmacy (Basel)
College of Pharmacy, University of Utah, 282 2000 E, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
Published: February 2025
The University of Utah Clinical Innovation Fellowship models novel partnerships between third-party payers, clinical practices, and academia. While healthcare costs continue to increase unabated and physician burnout leads to provider shortages, this fellowship focuses on both crises by training pharmacists to establish new practices in ambulatory clinic spaces using funding provided by third-party payers. Not only does this fellowship represent a future in which pharmacists are able to address third-party payers' need to reduce healthcare costs and clinics' need to address provider shortages, it also successfully trained fellows to pursue jobs in ambulatory care and academia. Payers, clinics, providers and patients all expressed a high degree of satisfaction with the work of the fellows. In multiple clinics where fellows established new pharmacy services, those services led directly to new job approvals funded by the clinics themselves. The purpose of this paper is to serve as a model by which fellowship programs elsewhere can be designed, as well as to show that partnerships between ambulatory clinics, payers, and pharmacists are both sustainable and beneficial to all parties including, most importantly, the patients who receive better care for their complex chronic disease states. While this paper is descriptive in nature, work is ongoing to objectively measure the impact of the fellows on patients, providers, and third-party payers. A sampling of outcomes is presented, describing the impact of the pharmacist fellows' efforts to improve medication management in primary care. Even with limited objective measures of success, we are able conclude that over the past 3 years, the fellowship has accomplished its aim of preparing fellows for future roles in ambulatory care, practice design, and academia while also demonstrating that a funding model aligning payers, clinics, and academia is sustainable.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11858872 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy13010028 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
March 2025
Division of Pain Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, Roswell Park Comprehensive Cancer Center, Buffalo, 14263, USA.
Objective measurements of pain and safe methods to alleviate it could revolutionize medicine. This study used functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) and virtual reality (VR) to improve pain assessment and explore non-pharmacological pain relief in cancer patients. Using resting-state fNIRS (rs-fNIRS) data and multinomial logistic regression (MLR), we identified brain-based pain biomarkers and classified pain severity in cancer patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcad Pediatr
March 2025
Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island.
Objectives: Electronic consultations (e-consults) are asynchronous communication between Primary Care Providers (PCPs) and specialists. Studies in adults show that e-consults improve specialty access, but the data in pediatrics are limited. We report evaluation and utility of a large pediatric e-consult program.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt Urol Nephrol
March 2025
Division of Urology, Department of Surgery, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Ambulatory Care Building, 140 Bergen Street, G-Level, Room 1680, Newark, New Jersey, 07103, USA.
Objective: To examine the factors influencing urologists' decision to offer slings instead of AUS for managing male stress urinary incontinence.
Methods: The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP) database 2006-2021 was used to identify patients undergoing surgical procedures for male urinary incontinence using current procedural terminology (CPT) codes. The Current procedural terminology (CPT) codes for AUS (53,445) and male slings (53,440) were used to analyze the data appropriately.
J Pediatr Urol
January 2025
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX, USA; Children's Health, Dallas, TX, USA.
Introduction: Young adults with spina bifida may experience altered genital sensation and sexual function. There are no validated questionnaires and few studies examining sexual function and activity in this population. Ambulatory status has previously been associated with better erectile function, but few studies report on other domains of sexual function in men and women.
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