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PQA to publish periodic column in The American Journal of Pharmacy Benefits

1/20/2015

 




SPRINGFIELD, Va. — The Pharmacy Quality Alliance and the American Journal of Pharmacy Benefits on Tuesday announced a partnership in which PQA will contribute a new column to each AJPB issue entitled, "Medication Quality Matters." This new column, published six times per year, will provide AJPB readers an opportunity to better understand the new performance measures that focus on the appropriate and safe use of medication and medication management services.


 


“PQA is pleased to become the newest regular contributor to the journal and we look forward to adding valuable and timely content on the growing number of key performance measures being used in our healthcare system today, as well as to discussions on the impact these metrics are having on the overall improvement of patients’ care," said Laura Cranston, PQA executive director. "We are also pleased that AJPB will be distributed to those organizations that are part of PQA's full membership that would like to receive this publication.”


 


Brian Haug, president of Managed Markets, which publishes AJPB, noted that both groups are dedicated to seeking the input of many stakeholders and bringing these groups together to advance the healthcare agenda. “We have found a partner who not only shares our healthcare mission but also shares our approach to working with people,” Haug said. 


 


The monthly column in AJPB will begin with an article entitled, "Medication Management: Measuring What Matters." This first article was authored by a team of professionals, including the lead author, Marie Smith, and PQA's Performance Measurement Team - Lynn Pezzullo, Julie Kuhle and Woody Eisenberg. The article outlines several different types of quality measures available to healthcare organizations, some of which are tied to medications while others are not.


 


The authors discuss the fact that while hundreds of measures are used in today's healthcare delivery system, many “care gaps” still exist. Room remains for new performance measures that can differentiate provider performance, address critical patient safety issues, and define high performance teams.


 


 


 

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