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

Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

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Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System. Charles F. Caley, Pharm.D., BCPP Associate Clinical Professor University of Connecticut. I NTRODUCTION. Mental Illness on Campus. American College Health Survey Top 10 health problems during academic year Depression17.8% - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

Charles F. Caley, Pharm.D., BCPP

Associate Clinical Professor

University of Connecticut

Page 2: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

INTRODUCTION

Page 3: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

Mental Illness on Campus

American College Health Survey Top 10 health problems during academic year

• Depression 17.8%• Anxiety 12.4%• SAD 8.1%

Top 10 health impediments to academic performance• Depr/SAD/Anx 15.7%

N = 94,806 completed surveys J Am College Health 2007;55(4):195–206.

Page 4: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

N = 939 UMich students completed surveys NASPA Journal 2006;43(3):410–31.

College Student Mental Hlth SurveyPsychiatric Diagnosis by Student Self-Report

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

Depr Eating Anx ADHD PTSD SocAnx OCD SA Bipolar Psychosis

%

Page 5: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

DESCRIPTION OF SERVICE

Page 6: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

• 20,000 students at the University of Connecticut

• Approximately 6,000 visits to CMHS annually

• Two 0.5 FTE psychiatrists, one APRN, seven therapists

Page 7: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

Psychiatric Pharmacist Services

Consultation w/ patient record review / pt interview / written note in chart

Consultation w/ record review and discussion with APRN

Education Direct to patient Weekly APRN meetings Staff inservices Drug information questions

Page 8: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

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)

Page 9: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

IMPACT ON PATIENT CARE

Page 10: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

Results 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

Page 11: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

Results Consultations by type of recommendation

Change dose 8 (30%) Change medication 7 (26%) Start new medication 6 (22%) Patient education 6 (22%) No changes to tx plan 2 (7%) Recommend adj. psychotherapy 1 (4%)

Page 12: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

Staff Education

Weekly APRN Meetings Clinical pharmacology Pk drug–drug interactions Psychotropic adverse effect profiles Pharmacotherapeutic selection process

SHS Inservices Mechanisms of drug intolerance Drug interactions btwn common Rxs and

common OTCs Serotonin syndrome review and update

Page 13: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

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 Clinical outcomes beyond implementation

Results

Page 14: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System

To maintain service funding Explore additional avenues for billing / funding

Obtain outcome data Symptom severity change CMHS service use Academic performance Patient satisfaction

Campus outreach Present project results at annual ACHA in June

Future

Page 15: Psychiatric Pharmacy in a University Student Health System