Pharmacies in the United States
There are approximately 88,000 pharmacies in the United States. Over half (about 48,000) are located within drug stores, grocery stores, hospitals, department stores, medical clinics, surgery clinics, universities, nursing homes, prisons, and other facilities. The remaining pharmacies are considered to be independent or privately owned. The top 25 pharmacy chain stores represent about 38,000 pharmacy locations in the U.S. and employ about 149,000 on-staff pharmacists. California has 8,015 pharmacies, the most of any state. Texas, Florida, New York, and Pennsylvania round out the top five states for pharmacy locations.[1] Nationwide, the number of community pharmacies increased by 6.3% between 2007-2015, and the number of pharmacies per 10,000 people (2.11) did not change. However, the number of pharmacies per-capita varies substantially across counties, ranging from 0 to 13.6 per- 10,000 people in 2015.[2]
Patient care services
Access
Community pharmacies offer basic preliminary health assessments in addition to dispensing prescriptions. The community pharmacist is considered to be the most accessible healthcare professional to the general public, as they are available to anyone on a walk-in basis. [3] Approximately 9 out of 10 Americans live within 5 miles of a community pharmacy.[4]
Dispensing Prescriptions
The primary role of pharmacies in the US is to safely and accurately fill prescriptions ordered by healthcare providers for patients. The pharmacy may receive a prescription in many ways, including a hardcopy, verbally over the phone, or electronically from the provider's electronic medical record system (EMR) is linked to the pharmacy.[5] Upon receival, the pharmacy staff first verify or update the patient's profile in the pharmacy computer system. The profile includes the patient's name, date of birth, address, phone number, insurance, allergies, conditions, etc., all factors that help ensure the correct patient receives the correct and appropriate medication in a safe manner. The prescription details typically consisting of the medication name, dosage form, instructions, quantity, day supply, refills, etc. are entered into the computer. The pharmacist checks to ensure the prescription has been entered accurately, any interactions between other medication therapies or conditions, and appropriateness of the therapy for the patient. Depending on the pharmacy's computer system, the claim is either submitted for payment to the insurance, discount care, or filled for the cash price either after the prescription is entered or after the pharmacist checks the order.[5]
Drug Utilization Review
Part of the dispensing process includes managing a patient's therapy, including prescription drugs and over the counter (OTC) medications and assessing their appropriateness of the therapy for the patient - this is also referred to as drug utilization review (DUR). The DUR process is completed by the pharmacist. The process reviews a patient's drug order in a systemic and comprehensive review against predetermined criteria and compared against a patient’s or a population’s data records. The DUR process often utilizes computerized algorithms to perform key checks with known data, and the results of the algorithms are reviewed by the pharmacist. Common issues analyzed are appropriate prescription medications dosage, drug interactions, duplications or contraindications with the patient’s disease state or condition. Evaluation or interactions are often classified in the following categories: [6]
- Clinical abuse/misuse
- Drug-disease contraindications (when a prescribed drug should not be used with certain diseases)
- Drug-dosage modification
- Drug-drug interactions (when two or more different drugs interact and alter their intended effects and may cause adverse effects)
- Drug-patient precautions (gender, age, allergies, pregnancy, etc.)
- Formulary considerations or substitutions (e.g., therapeutic interchange, generic substitution, cost)
DUR can be performed in prospective, concurrently, or retrospectively. Prospective DUR review is when a patient's planned drug therapy is evaluated before a medication is dispensed. Concurrent review is performed during the course of treatment with ongoing drug therapy. A retrospective DUR reviews drug therapy after the drug therapy is completed. The retrospective review helps detect patterns in prescribing, dispensing or administering drugs, or following with any post-therapy issues.[6]
Pharmacy chains
The table below shows the top 25 pharmacy chains in the United States ranked by total number of pharmacists, according to the U.S. National Pharmacy Market Summary done by IQVIA in 2019.[1]
References
- ^ a b "U.S. National Pharmacy Market Summary". OneKey by IQVIA. July 2019.
- ^ Qato, Dima Mazen; Zenk, Shannon; Wilder, Jocelyn; Harrington, Rachel; Gaskin, Darrell; Alexander, G. Caleb (2017-08-16). "The availability of pharmacies in the United States: 2007–2015". PLOS ONE. 12 (8): e0183172. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0183172. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 5559230.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ says, Dean Reardon (2016-09-06). "Community Pharmacy". News-Medical.net. Retrieved 2020-12-13.
- ^ "By the numbers: How community pharmacists measure up". Drug Store News. Retrieved 2020-12-13.
- ^ a b "Getting a prescription filled: MedlinePlus Medical Encyclopedia". medlineplus.gov. Retrieved 2021-01-06.
- ^ a b "Drug Utilization Review | AMCP.org". www.amcp.org. Retrieved 2021-01-15.