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Point of Care Testing Structure

Title

Point of Care Testing Structure

Description

Possess of a CLIA-waiver in the pharmacy.

 

A higher score is better

Rationale

Point-of-care testing (POCT) requires a CLIA-waiver. Pharmacies that offer point-of-care testing may be able to optimize care through patient monitoring (blood glucose, HbA1c, HIV, influenza, COVID-19, pharmacogenomics, lipids, and others).

Logic Model

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This measure evaluates the pharmacy’s readiness to provide advance services and address gaps in care, healthcare accessibility, and monitoring.

Level of Analysis

Pharmacy (Nominal and Structure)

Data Source

Survey

Denominator Statement

This measure is a structure-based measure evaluate a nominal endpoint. The denominator is the pharmacy.

Denominator Calculation

1.     The pharmacy

Denominator Exclusions

No exclusions

Denominator Exclusion Rationale

N/A

Numerator Statement

Possession of a CLIA-waiver at the pharmacy

Numerator Calculation

Nominal endpoint determined by survey results

Seguridad Measure Specification Process

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Data Stratification

The measure rate will be reported as pharmacy.

 

If available and feasible, measure rate will be reported by type of pharmacy (e.g., health-system, community, specialty, mail-order, long-term care).

 

If available and feasible, measure rate will be reported by line of business (pharmacy Medicare rate, pharmacy Medicaid rate, pharmacy Commercial rate, and pharmacy uninsured rate).

 

Risk adjustment will be applied when available.

Value Sets

No value set is required for the calculation of this measure.

Future Iterations

Many pharmacy measures are designed as structure or process. Future goals of this concept include evaluating the outcomes from CLIA-waived tests, the types of tests, patient-reported outcomes, and other aspects of the quality and safety of POCT.

Harmonization1

Payors: Some payors are evaluated on collection of clinical data, like hemoglobin A1c. This measure will help pharmacies align with those measures.

Providers: N/A

1. Measures that have either the same target populations (denominator) or the same measure focus (numerators) may be considered related, whereas measures that have the same targeted population (denominator) and same measure focus (numerator), are considered competing measures. Measures being developed should be harmonized, where feasible, to previously established measures to decrease measure burden. Choose My Pharmacy measures are developed for pharmacy evaluation, which is a novel area for measurement science, no current measure evaluates this level of analysis. Choose My Pharmacy measures will be harmonized to the extent possible, recognizing different levels of analysis have different data elements, and instead the focus will be to vertically integrate the Choose My Pharmacy measures with other measurement systems and measures.