Term
Responsibilities of Professional
(6) |
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Definition
1. Licensure
2. Duty (fiduciary)-Must put welfare, health, and safety of community abover other considerations
3. Duty (to members of profession)-Adherence to a Code of Ethics
4. Adherence to laws (federal and state)
5. One must be licensed which is a revocable privalage
6. Professionals have liabilities others do not |
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Term
Scarlett Earle Pillars of Professional (7) |
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Definition
1. Technical skill
2. Social responsibility
3. Knowledge of history
4. Knowledge of literature and the arts
5. Personal integrity
6. Faith that there is some meaning and value to life
7. "The grace of humility" |
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Term
Written Communication Tidbits (4) |
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Definition
1. Easily disseminated
2. Errors are easily apparent
3. Writings must be factual, not opinion based
4. Do not put in writing anything you don't want subpoenaed |
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Term
Important things to keep in mind about oral communication (3) |
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Definition
1. Tone
2. Word Choice
3. Grammar |
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Term
How to Actively Listen (8) |
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Definition
1. Eye contact
2. Schedule enough time for conversations
3. Be genuine
4. Avoid emotionality and attacks of others
5. Paraphrase the message you heard
6. Keep still and silent; do not talk to fill pauses
7. Ask clarifying questions
8. Avoid distracting gestures |
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Term
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Definition
Morals are personal judgements as to right and wrong
Typically societal in nature and can be thought of as shared ideals of a group even if not practiced
Morals differ between societies because of the different emphasis placed on them |
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Term
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Definition
Standards of right and worng dictaing actions in a given situation
Do not include personal feelings, morals, laws, or social standards
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Term
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Definition
1. Rights
2. Obligations
3. Benefits to society
4. Fairness
5. Specific virtues |
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Term
Ethical standards must be supported by |
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Definition
consistent and well-founded reasons |
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Term
Fundamental Principles of Healthcare Ethics (6) |
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Definition
1. Autonomy
2. Beneficence
3. Nonmaleficence
4. Truthtelling
5. Confidentiality
6. Justice |
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Term
Who made ancient Chinese pharmacopeia |
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Definition
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Term
How long did Greco-Roman medicinal practice dominate? |
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Definition
Until the middle ages when pharmacists split off from physicians |
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Term
First drug stores opened when? |
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Definition
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Term
Who officially separated pharmacy from medicine? |
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Definition
Frederick II of Hohenstaufen, Emperor of Germany and King of Sicily in 1240 AD |
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Term
What period did physicians start to compete with pharmacists for dispensing fees? |
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Definition
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Term
Year and founding and role of Society of Apothecaries
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Definition
1617
1st example of pharmaceutical regulation by allowing inspection of apothecary shops (REALLY SECOND CASE OF REGULATION BECUASE KING FREDERICK II WAS THE FIRST!!!) |
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Term
Did initial regulations put limits on who could compound and dispense drugs? |
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Definition
No, pretty much anybody with chemicals did dispense drugs |
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Term
18th Century America Pharmacy Points (5) |
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Definition
1. Most practitioners illiterate
2. Combined medicine and pharmacy practiced by political leaders, clergymen, and midwives
3. Only apothocary shops were in large cities
4. No clear distinction between medicine and pharmacy
5. Most medical conditions were acute |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
First hospital in america established in what year and what city |
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Definition
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Term
First hospital pharmacy in America founded in what year and where |
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Definition
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Term
Early 19th Century America
1. What prevailed as health risk?
2. What began during this time period important to pharmacy? |
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Definition
1. Infectious disease because of population boom
2. Retail pharmacies began to open door |
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Term
How did first retail pharmacies come into being? |
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Definition
Family docs who owned medicine shops began to sell them off to their clerks so they could focus on medicine |
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Term
When was the US Pharmacopoeia first published? |
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Definition
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Term
Name and date of first college of pharmacy founding |
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Definition
1821
Philadelphia College of Apothecaries |
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Term
Late 19th Century Characterized by (4) |
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Definition
1. Drug Importation Act
2. Domination of department and chain drug stores
3. Huge advances in tech, diagnostic tools, available services, and drugs
4. Need for regulation of pharmacy as a profession becomes evident to all parties |
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Term
3 Major Periods in 20th Century Pharmacy with Time Periods |
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Definition
1. Traditional (1900-1940)
2. Transitional (1940-1970)
3. Patient-Care (1970-Present) |
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Term
Function of Drug Importation Act |
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Definition
Required inspection of imported drugs
Rapidly became corrupted |
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Term
When and where and why founding of APhA |
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Definition
1852, College of Pharmacy of the City of New York
Focused on pharmacist competancy and greater regulation which lead to uniform pharmacy act which created state regulations creating pharmacy as a profession |
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Term
Pure Food and Drug Act date and function |
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Definition
1906, food and drug safety |
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Term
Time of education improvement in pharmacy brought about by the American Conference of PHarmaceutical Faculties |
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Definition
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Term
FDA created by which act and when |
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Definition
Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act in 1938 |
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Term
Time product-centered practice took hold |
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Definition
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Term
Pharmacy autonomy rollback occured in 1952 how |
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Definition
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act amended to limit pharmacist autonomy and liability |
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Term
Time period when pharmacy power lessened b/c of government and physicians |
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Definition
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Term
Define Pharmaceutical care as posited by Douglas Hepler and Linda Strand |
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Definition
The direct responsible provision of medicatio-related care for the purpose of achieving definite outcomes that improve a patients quality of life
Reduce Disease symptoms and prevent disease |
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Term
Define diversity as it relates to pharmacogenomics |
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Definition
Factors that make individuals or subgroups of a population different from the rest of the population |
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Term
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Definition
The study of the variability in drug response that is due to genetic variability |
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Term
4 Areas we will see PGx in pharmacy |
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Definition
1. Class in P3
2. NAPLEX
3. Practice with metabolism screenings etc
4. Law with increased liability |
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Term
How is current prescription knowledge assessed before PGx brings about all the changes it will (2) |
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Definition
1. Normal dosage calculated from means of studies from fairly homogenous population
2. Outcomes of individual trials as it relates to published literature |
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Term
What percentage of genetics accounts for variability in drug response? |
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Definition
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Term
Warfarin PGx
Two Important Enzymes and Functions |
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Definition
1. VKORC1-Reduces vitamin K to allow coagulation. Mutations that inhibit enzyme lead to less clotting anyway making warfarin overdose more dangerous
2. CYP2C9-Metabolizes warfarin so that mutations inhibiting function can lead to decreased warfarin metabolism and increased bleeding risk |
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Term
Bad use of genetics in the past include |
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Definition
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Term
Define:
1. Nonmaleficience
2. Beneficence
What is relevance to pharmacogenomics |
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Definition
1. to do now harm and prevent harm
2. to do good
Relevance to nonmaleficince is that you can withhold a drug that would do harm or tweak a dose
Relevance to beneficence is that alterative therapy treatment becomes more efficacious |
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Term
Azathioprine PGx
1. Function
2. Uses (3)
3. Mtabolism
4. Rare Adverse rxn
5. What is mutatated and what does this mean
6. Why is test not performed to detect mutation?
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Definition
1. Immunosuppressant
2. Kidney transplant, severe rheumatoid arthritis, inflammatory bowel diseases
3. Methylated by thiopurine-s-methyltransferase (TPMT) and elminated from body
4. Myelosuppression
5. TPMT is mutated (homozygotes worse off than heterozygotes)-->Give less azathioprine to prevent myelosuppression
6. Not FDA approved or required meaning FDA doesn't consider genotype as cause (nonmaleficience bad)
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Term
Can you give out a patient's genetic status to family? |
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Definition
Not to family or anyone else...treated as medical information |
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Term
Finding of Pate v. Threlkel, Florida Supreme Court 1995
1. What was case about
2. Finding |
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Definition
1. Woman sued b/c mom had inherited thyroid cancer and physican did not let mother of woman know so the woman did not know of increased risk
2. Physician negligent, but had no right or obligation to disclose the information to the daughted b/c of patient-doctor confidentiality |
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Term
Safer v. Pack, New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division 1996
1. Case
2. Finding |
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Definition
1. Woman sued father's physican b/c father had polyp condition in colon she was not informed of so that she could not obtain preventative screening
2. Court found liability with physican b/c he was obligated to protect the life of the daughter |
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Term
How does confidentiality apply to pharmacits with PGx? |
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Definition
Must inform patient properly, may need malpractice insurance later on |
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Term
1. What is GINA
2. What is not covered (3) |
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Definition
1. Genetic Information Non-discrimination Act of 2008
Prevents discrimination based on genetic by health insurers and employers
2. Life, Diability, and Long-term care insurance |
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Term
5 Steps Pharmacists Should Follow with PGx and Patients |
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Definition
1. Inform risks and benefits
2. Warn of hazards of genetic discrimination
3. Do not talk with family unless given permission
4. Encourage patients to discuss results with at-risk relatives
5. Allow patients to make their own informed decisions regarding all issues related to genetic testing |
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Term
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Definition
Assesses how decision-making process works prior to decision
How do you organize your activities to further human welfare, what is right and fair, and what are the reasons for doing right |
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Term
Who invented CMD and when and what is it grounded in |
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Definition
Kohlberg in 1958
Grounded in Piage's pioneering theories of how children develop logical and moral reasoning skills |
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Term
Cognitive portion of CMD explains what |
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Definition
How a person thinks by placing an emphasis on emotions (pyschodynamic theory) |
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Term
Structural portion of CMD explains what |
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Definition
Describes underlying innate mental process by placing interest on how decisions are arrived at
Different ages can hold the same view and arrive at that view through completely different reasoning |
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Term
What have studies supporting CMD found? |
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Definition
That moral reasoning was a bigger contributer toward clinical performance than GPA and standardized test scores |
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Term
Moral Reasoning Focuses on (3) |
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Definition
Self interest (pre-conventional)
Relationships (conventional)
Ethical Principles (post-conventional) |
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Term
What dose N2 score measure in CMD (2) |
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Definition
1. Level of principled thinking
2. Degree to which non-principled items receive lower ratings |
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Term
Number of prescriptions dispensed in 2009 |
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Definition
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Term
Sales of prescriptions 2009 |
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Definition
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Term
Avg cost of prescription 2009 |
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Definition
Brand-$155.45
Generic-$39.73 |
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Term
Largest increasing branch of pharmacy and 2nd largest |
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Definition
Mail-order is number 1
Chain stores are number 2 |
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Term
How much less is a community pharmacy's profit margin than the median Fortune 500 company? |
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Definition
less than 1/3 that of Fortune 500 company (1.6% profit margin which jumps to 2-3% if you exclude food-only stores) |
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Term
Typical Community Pharmacy
1. Open how many days per week
2. % of Sales based on medicines compared to chains |
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Definition
1. 6 days a week
2. 95% independents and 69% chains |
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Term
How do pharmacies generate revenue (2) |
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Definition
1. Insurance reimbursement based on discount from AWP
2. Pharmacies recieve small dispensing fee (<$5)
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Term
Average Cost of Retail Presciption in 2009 |
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Definition
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Term
% of healthcare costs accounted for by prescriptions |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
1. Reimportation of drugs from Canada
2. Medication errors and drug-related problems (DRP)
3. Managed care and other cost-reduction efforts are leading people to obtain medications in different ways (ie mail and internet) |
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Term
Define Profession for Latif |
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Definition
1. Study and training
2. Code of ethics
3. Associations
4. Fiduciary responsibility to put client interest above self-interest |
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Term
First pharmacist to open office-based pharmacy in US and in what year |
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Definition
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Term
1. Who regulates OTC drug advertising
2. Who regulates prescription drug advertising |
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Definition
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Term
What controls pharmacy (4) |
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Definition
1. Licensure
2. Laws
3. Rules and Regulations
4. Code of ethics |
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Term
Rough breakdown of who pays for prescriptions (3 sources) |
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Definition
50% by 3rd parties (Pharmaceutical Benefit Managers)
25% by cash
25% by state funded health insurance |
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Term
Number of pharmacits in US |
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Definition
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Term
1. What does Medicare not cover (3)?
2. What % do seniors have to pick up? |
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Definition
1. Dental, hearing, or vision
2. 22% |
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Term
% GDP WV spends on healthcare |
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Definition
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Term
National Health Spending
1. $ amount in 2007
2. Projected $ amount 2009 |
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Definition
1. $2.2 trillion
2. $2.5 trillion |
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Term
National Health Spending as a Share of GDP
1. What accounted for full % jump in healthcare as it related to GDP in 2009?
2. Healthcare will account for $_ of every $_ of economic activity by 2018 |
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Definition
1. Recession
2. $1 of every $5 |
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Term
National Health Spending Per Persion (1997-2009)
1. % increase in the amount spent per person on healthcare b/t 1997-2009 |
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Definition
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Term
Major Programs as a Share of the Federal Budget
1. What has been gaining on Social Security recently? |
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Definition
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Term
Health Care Spending in Selected Developed Countries
1. US spending greater than other developed countris in two ways...what are they?
2. What is the majority of expense in other countries compared to US? |
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Definition
1. Per capita spending and %GDP
2. Public sector for other developed countries (private in US) |
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Term
Spending Distribution by Category, 2007
1. What accounts for largest share of healthcare dollar in US?
2. What % is from prescription drugs? |
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Definition
1. Hospital and physician services
2. 10% |
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Term
Spending Summary, by Category
1. What has declined and grown over the past 20 years as a share of health care dollars spent? |
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Definition
1. Hospital care declined while prescription drugs increased |
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Term
Spending Distribution in Healthcare, by contributers (2007)
1. 3 major contributers to financing health care |
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Definition
1. Households, businesses, and government |
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Term
3 ways that contributers to health care fund health care |
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Definition
1. Buy services directly
2. Purchase private insurance
3. Fund public programs |
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Term
4 Major sources of healthcare payment |
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Definition
1. State and local government
2. Federal government
3. Household
4. Private Business |
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Term
What has the largest historical impact on the % of healthcare provided by federal government? |
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Definition
Implementation of Medicare and Medicaid |
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Term
% of public funds of medical spending |
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Definition
46% with the rest coming from private funding sources |
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Term
Services paid by Government by %
1. Lowest type of treatment and %
2. Prescription drug % |
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Definition
1. Dental is the lowest at 6.4%
2. Prescriptino drugs at 35.5% |
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Term
Private vs. Public Spending Distribution
1. % comparison between public and private on hostpital and long term care |
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Definition
1. Government is 40% and private is 28% |
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Term
What % of private insurance is spent on
1. Hospital
2. Physician Services
3. What is consumer out-of-pocket concentrated in with private insurance (3) |
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Definition
1. 33%
2. 31%
3. Prescription drugs, dental, and other professional services |
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Term
How many years has the growth in health spending been lower than the historical average? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the only healthcare expenditure spending to see a decline and what is the new % for it |
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Definition
Prescription drugs and 4.9% |
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Term
1. 2 largest contributors to increase in health spending and their % contribution
2. Other contributions and percentage |
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Definition
1. Medical price inflation (>50%) and More tests and more expensive tests (25%)
2. Population increase and old people (<25%) |
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Term
Number of times healthcare spending has increased since 1970 |
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Definition
Over 20 times 1970 levels |
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Term
1. What has seen the largest increase in prescription spending since 1980
2. Why did Part D not increase government prescription spending |
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Definition
1. Private insurance
2. Part D just shifted cost form Medicaid to Medicare both of which are federal programs |
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Term
What percent of healthcare costs do consumers pay out-of pocket? |
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Definition
14%...this has actually declined as a percentage over the years even though the amount paid has increased |
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Term
Pros of US healthcare system (1) |
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Definition
1. State-of-the-art treatments |
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Term
Cons of US healthcare system (4) |
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Definition
1. Fragmented and inefficient
2.Spends more for less result than any other country
3. Massive uninsured, uneven quality
4. Administrative waste |
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Term
US Healthcare System Rank in the World |
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Definition
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Term
Why does the US have worse healthcare outcomes? |
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Definition
"we alone treat healthcare as a commodity distributed according to the ability to pay, rather than as a social service to be distributed according to medical need" |
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Term
Oregon Health Plan
1. # of people Medicaid expanded to
2. What did it do for pre-existing conditions
3. Based on
4. How did it manage care?
5. Did it work? |
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Definition
1. 120,000
2. High-risk pool
3. Prioritized list of diagnoses and treatments removing quality of life measures
4. Placing strict capitation (payment guidelines) on physicians
5. So far the results have been positive |
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Term
TennCare
1. # of new Medicaid patients
2. Method of paying for it
3. Why did it not work (3)?
4. Benefits found (4) |
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Definition
1. 500,000
2. Sliding scale for premioums and cost sharing based on means
3. Rapid implementation, lack of provider participation, and underfunded
4. Decreased uninsured, increased satisfaction, decreased hospital utilization, and improved outcomes for asthma and diabetes |
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Term
Massacheusetts Health Reform
1. Method of operation
2. Good and bad
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Definition
1. Impose financial penalty for those who don't get coverage and provide subsidies for low income
2. Good is more people covered, bad is that costs increased if you don't qualify for subsidies |
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Term
What dose US healthcare system favor that could lead to worse outcomes (2)? |
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Definition
1. Curative treatments
2. Rehabilitative interventions |
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Term
Emerging Issues/Challenges for US Healthcare (8) |
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Definition
1. Aging population
2. Increased longevity, immigration, culturally diverse aged
3. Major gaps in delivery system
4. Multidisciplinary care needed
5. More culturally sensitive, geriatric providers needed
6. Chronic disabilities of age not covered
7. New technology increasing costs
8. Lack of mental health coverage
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Term
% increase in life expectancy past 105 years |
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Definition
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Term
Unfunded Medicare liabilities total |
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Definition
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Term
Goal of collaborative care |
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Definition
To reduce number of procedures that will not greatly extend life (ie, new prostate cancer in a 95 year old man is not what will most likely kill the man) |
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Term
For every dollar spent on medications, how many are spent on problems with medications? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
Measures one's level of principled thinking |
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