Title of article :
Impact of a Pharmacist-driven Spirometry Clinic Service within a Community Family Health Center: A 5-year Retrospective Review
Author/Authors :
J. Cawley, Michael Department of Pharmacy Practice and Pharmacy Administration - Philadelphia College of Pharmacy - University of the Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, USA , J. Warning, William Crozer-Keystone Center for Family Health, Springfield, PA, USA
Abstract :
Objective: This study was designed to describe the impact of a trained pharmacist
in performing quality spirometry testing within a community family health
center. Methods: This was a retrospective, cohort study of 150 physician‐referred
patients who attended their scheduled spirometry office appointment between
November 2008 and December 2013. Information obtained included type of the
disease (patients with obstructive or restrictive pulmonary disease), calculated lung
age decline due to smoking history, quality of spirometry testing, and percentage
of patients requiring pulmonary drug regimen alterations due to spirometry
results. Pearson correlation and descriptive statistics were used to address study
objectives. Findings: Spirometry testing performed by a pharmacist resulted
in 87% of tests meeting guidelines for quality. Testing identified patients with
reversible airway disease (39%), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (21%),
restrictive (11%), and mixed obstructive/restrictive (11%) lung defect. Patients
with abnormal spirometry demonstrated a greater smoking pack‐year history and
calculated lung age than patients with normal spirometry (29.1 pack‐years vs.
17 pack‐years; P = 0.024 and 76.3 years vs. 54.6 years; P < 0.001, respectively).
A weak correlation was found between a 29.1 smoking pack‐year history
and forced vital capacity (r = −0.3593, P = 0.018). The pharmacist assisted in
modifying pulmonary drug regimens in 69% of patients based on evidence‐based
guidelines. Conclusion: A pharmacist‐driven spirometry service was associated
with quality testing results, identified respiratory disease abnormalities, and helped
modifications of pulmonary drug regimens based on evidence‐based guidelines.
Future direction of this service may include collaborative practice agreements with
physicians to expand services of pharmacists to include spirometry testing.
Keywords :
Pharmacists , residence characteristics , respiratory function testing , spirometry
Journal title :
Journal of Research in Pharmacy Practice