2015 Annual Report for Outreach & Engagement

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Outreach & Engagement 2015 Annual Report


Thank you to the continued support of our major partners: The Cardinal Health Foundation The Center of Science and Industry (COSI) Charitable Pharmacy of Columbus, Ohio The Clinic at Faith Mission Giant Eagle Grace in the City - Hardin Clinic Helping Hands Health and Wellness Center The Kroger Company New Life Methodist Health and Wellness Center Physicians CareConnection

The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy Office of Outreach & Engagement 500 W. 12th Avenue Columbus, Ohio 43210 614.292.1966 Henry Mann Dean, College of Pharmacy Jennifer Rodis Assistant Dean for Outreach and Engagement Editor and Designer: Emily Keeler (c) 2015 The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy For alternative formats, or to request republishing this report in full or in part, contact Emily Keeler at keeler.16@osu.edu.


In This Issue Overview

Welcome .......................................................................................................................................................... 4 Quick Statistics ............................................................................................................................................... 5 Hires and Promotions ...................................................................................................................................5

Highlights

Pharmacy Outreach & Engagement Formalized ...................................................................................6 Ohio State Center Fights Drug Misuse on College Campuses ......................................................... 6 New Reporting Tool Tracks Outreach Activities Across the College .............................................. 6 Awards and Recognitions ........................................................................................................................... 7 Conrad Hilton Foundation Gives $2 Million to Ohio State ................................................................. 8 Pharmacy Professor Goff Receives $45,000 Engagement Impact Grant ...................................... 10 Publications, Posters and Presentations ................................................................................................. 11 Pharmacy Celebrates Its Schweitzer Fellows ........................................................................................ 11 Pharmacy Professor Rodis Receives Grant to Enhance Chronic Disease Outcomes .................14

Area Updates

Advocacy ......................................................................................................................................................... 15 Continuing Professional Development .................................................................................................... 15 Ohio State Professor Lends Testimony to HB 188 ................................................................................ 16 Generation Rx ................................................................................................................................................ 17 Generation Rx Lab ........................................................................................................................................ 18 Global Initiatives ............................................................................................................................................ 19 Students Provide Classes on U.S. Medication System to Newly Resettled Refugees ................20 P1 Geriatric Experience ................................................................................................................................ 20 Partner for Promotion ................................................................................................................................... 21 Pills, Potions, and Poisons .......................................................................................................................... 21 Ohio State Students “Script� Futures for East Side Seniors .............................................................. 22 Waitzman Pharmacy Scholarship Established at College of Pharmacy ..........................................22


OVERVIEW The past year has been a year of tremendous growth and change for outreach and engagement in the College of Pharmacy. We have established the Office of Outreach & Engagement and continued forward momentum through an outreach and engagement task force to achieve key areas of growth in the next few years: Infrastructure – synergy, value, and assessment as outreach and engagement aligns with the mission and vision of college and university in areas of teaching, research, and service Partnerships – enhancing knowledge transfer to professionals through continuous professional development and the public through branding and telling our stories Advocacy through action – pharmacist care advancement local to global

Jennifer Rodis Assistant Dean for Outreach and Engagement

Outreach and engagement has seen growth in personnel, with both promotions and new hires of talented individuals whose duties contribute to achieving our strategic goals. As a group, we aim to provide high-quality programs that foster positive interactions benefiting patients, students, and communities. We share these achievements through dissemination of the work to the scholarly as well as public communities and work to continually improve our outreach and engagement efforts. The college continued its commitment to the surrounding community, with students completing nearly 9,000 hours of community service throughout central Ohio in 2014-2015. These hours were spent providing health and wellness screenings, medication reviews, and education to underserved populations in the areas of prescription drug misuse prevention, optimizing medication use, medication adherence, and senior health. Faculty continued to impact communities through formal outreach and engagement programs as well as precepting and providing excellent patient care across communities. To create a streamlined process to track, highlight, and apply continuous quality improvement to outreach and engagement efforts a new tracking tool was developed and rolled out this past Spring. I am excited about the opportunity to lead growth in outreach and engagement. The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy has the people, ideas, and foundation upon which to create a model of outreach and engagement that is integrated and valued by the college faculty, staff, students, and the community. Enclosed you will find information for the 2014-2015 academic year on the many facets of outreach and engagement within the College of Pharmacy.

Jennifer Rodis, PharmD, BCPS, FAPhA Assistant Dean for Outreach & Engagement

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The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy


OVERVIEW

QUICK STATISTICS Outreach & Engagement Hours – 8,936.25 Total CHS P1 – 1,485 CHS P2 – 2,957 CHS P3 – 4,157.75 APhA-ASP – 286.5 Generation Rx Collaborative – 50

Pharmacy students contributed nearly

9,000 hours of outreach programs in Central Ohio.

HIRES AND PROMOTIONS Jennifer Rodis

Assistant Dean, Outreach & Engagement (P)

Cynthia Clouner

Hyun-Su Helen Kim

Global Pharmacy Practice and Education Fellow (H)

Ashley Knackstedt

Prevention Specialist (H)

Program Assistant (H)

Emily Keeler

Bella Mehta

Program Manager & Community Builder (P)

Director of Continuing Professional Development (P)

P - Promotion H - Hire FY 2015 Outreach & Engagement Annual Report

The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy

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HIGHLIGHTS

Pharmacy Outreach & Engagement Formalized In the Fall of 2014, Jennifer Rodis was appointed assistant dean for outreach and engagement. She soon set to work to put together an outreach and engagement task force. This group has worked over the past year to create a strategic plan and is now implementing these goals that were set. “This new structure will help us to impact more people in a meaningful way; it will benefit everyone from the people we serve to the students we teach. By establishing the office and putting resources behind it, the College of Pharmacy is confirming its commitment to students and the community.”

New Reporting Tool Tracks Outreach Activities Across the College A new reporting tool was developed to track outreach activities and hours for students, faculty, and staff while making improving the process for users. Developed using Qualtrics, the tool allows anyone in the college to submit information on outreach activities in real time and is mobile device friendly. This allows for faster, more accurate reporting and can help identify partners or highlight exciting events.

Ohio State Center Fights Drug Misuse on College Campuses The Conrad N. Hilton Foundation has awarded a grant of $2 million to establish The Ohio State University Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention and Recovery (OSUHEC). The Ohio State center serves as the premier alcohol and drug abuse prevention and recovery resource for colleges and universities across the nation. The mission of the center is to help college and community leaders develop, implement and evaluate programs and policies to reduce problems experienced by students related to alcohol and other drug use. OSUHEC is a collaboration among Ohio State’s College of Social Work, College of Pharmacy, Office of Student Life, Generation Rx Initiative and Collegiate Recovery Community. Additional information on page 8. 6

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The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy


HIGHLIGHTS

Awards and Recognitions Student Awards Kai Ming Hu, Erin Yates, Jennifer Rodis, Christopher Westrick, Brittany Gagne First Place Poster OSU IPEP Symposium, Columbus OH, May 2015 Rita F. Waitzman Community Pharmacy Scholarship awarded to Kai Ming Hu and Erin Yates Mary Vincent and Abbey Strazar finished their project and became Schweitzer Fellows for Life Schweitzer Fellowship awarded to Andrea Lee and Godsfavour Umoru APhA Academy of Student Pharmacists (APhA-ASP) Chapter Patient Care Award APhA-ASP Ohio State University Chapter

Faculty & Staff Awards Cari Brackett $5,000 Area Health Education Center (AHEC), OSU College of Medicine “A Community-Based Collaborative to Sustainably Reduce Sedentary Living” Kristin Casper Ambulatory Care Board Certification Participant, 2014-2015 OSTEP Mid-Career & Senior Faculty Learning Community Deborah Goff $45,000 Engagement Impact Grant Ohio State’s Office of Outreach and Engagement “Ohio State and South Africa Collaborate to Combat Antibiotic Resistant ‘Superbugs’”

Kenneth Hale, Nicole Kwiek $200,000 The Cardinal Health Foundation “Generation Rx: Preventing the Misuse and Abuse of Prescription Medications” Kenneth Hale, Stuart Beatty, Kelli Barnes $30,000 BioDelivery Sciences International “Patient education video productions for prescription drug misuse prevention” James McAuley, Matthew Lengel, Catherine Kuhn, Marialice Bennett $1,000 APhA Foundation “Pharmacist-Led Fitness, Nutrition, and Weight Management Coaching Program: Patient Utilization and Expectations” Maria Pruchnicki Invited Participant, President and Provost’s Teaching and Learning Summit The Ohio State University, May 13, 2015 Participant, 2014-2015 OSTEP Mid-Career & Senior Faculty Learning Community Jennifer Rodis $46,200 Grant from Ohio Department of Health “Medication Therapy Management in FederallyQualified Health Centers: Improving Chronic Disease” Alexa Sevin Poster Presentation Award at All Together Better Health VII, Hosted by The National Center for Interprofessional Practice and Education, Coordinated by the World Interprofessional Education and Collaborative Practice Coordinating Committee

Kenneth Hale 2015 BSPS Distinguished Teaching Award. The Ohio State University. BSPS Graduation Celebration Speaker. The Ohio State University, May 9, 2015.

Partner Awards

Kenneth Hale, Nicole Kwiek $250,000 (Part of a $2,000,000 overall grant) Hilton Foundation “Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Drug Misuse Prevention and Recovery”

Charitable Pharmacy of Central Ohio Celebrated 5 years of service Named one of The Columbus Foundation’s 2015 “5 Nonprofits to Watch”

Dianne Radigan, Cardinal Health Foundation Friend of the College Award The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy

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HIGHLIGHTS

Conrad N. Hilton Foundation Gives $2 Million to Ohio State to Establish National Collegiate Substance Abuse Prevention, Recovery Center The Conrad N. Hilton Foundation awarded a grant of $2 million to establish The Ohio State University Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Drug Abuse Prevention and Recovery (OSUHEC). The Ohio State center serves as the premier alcohol and drug abuse prevention and recovery resource for colleges and universities across the

nation. The mission of the center is to help college and community leaders develop, implement and evaluate programs and policies to reduce problems experienced by students related to alcohol and other drug use. OSUHEC is a collaboration among Ohio State’s College of Social Work, College of Pharmacy, Office of Student Life, Generation Rx and Collegiate Recovery Community.

“Ohio State has a number of innovative programs in place for substance abuse prevention and recovery, which makes Ohio State a logical home for the center,” said Kenneth M. Hale, associate director of OSUHEC. “This donation from the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation will help solidify and augment our current programs like the Generation Rx Initiative and the Collegiate Recovery Community, and it will catalyze stronger efforts to support similar work at colleges and universities across the country.” According to the National Institutes of Health, more than 1,800 college students nationwide between the ages of 18 and 24 die each year from alcoholrelated unintentional injuries, including motor vehicle crashes, and more than 690,000 students nationwide between the ages of 18 and 24 are assaulted by another student who has been drinking. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report unintentional drug overdose as the leading cause of accidental death in the U.S., and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration reports the average age of prescription drug abuse onset is 22. Students who

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engage in heavy alcohol and drug use often fail academically, which has long-term consequences. “It is well established that substance use on college campuses leads to a number of negative outcomes and can interfere with the academic success of students,” said Steven M. Hilton, Chairman, President & CEO of the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. “We are pleased to support the launch of a new national center to ensure colleges and universities across the country are equipped with the information and resources they need to support prevention, early intervention and recovery.” “College can be challenging, especially for students in recovery from drug and alcohol addiction,” said Sarah Nerad, head of Ohio State’s Campus Recovery Community and nationally recognized for her participation in furthering recovery programs on college campuses. “Recovery programs and support services will be an integral focus of the OSUHEC. Our goal will be to ensure that schools can support their recovering students as they pursue academics alongside their recovery.”

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HIGHLIGHTS ...continued from page 8 The OSUHEC will take a four-tiered approach to servicing health care providers and students, folding services into the areas of education and training, research and evaluation, technical assistance and technology development. “Before they lost federal funding, the HEC was a national leader and resource for college administrators and health professionals in the area of alcohol and drug prevention,” said Clapp. “OSUHEC will capitalize on the synergistic collaboration of Ohio State’s substantial resources, including national experts and nationally recognized programs like our Generation Rx prescription drug abuse prevention program and our Student Wellness Collegiate Recovery Community. We have also begun working with Ohio State’s College of Engineering to create smart-phone apps and simulations to support alcohol and drug prevention efforts.”

The OSUHEC will be guided by Clapp, who is also professor and associate dean of research at Ohio State’s College of Social Work. Clapp, who formerly served as the Department of Education’s HEC director, is a member of the National Advisory Council for the U.S. Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. Clapp is also an expert in Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) and has managed more than $8 million in SBIRT-related projects. The OSUHEC will have two associate directors, Connie Boehm and Hale. Boehm is the director of the Student Life Student Wellness Center The Ohio State University and currently serves as the national co-chair for the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators (NASPA) Wellness and Health Promotion Knowledge Community. Hale is the founder of the Generation Rx

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initiative, widely recognized as the nation’s leading prevention program for prescription drug abuse among college students. Nerad, a current Ohio State graduate student recognized nationally for her participation in furthering recovery programs on college campuses, will serve as the program director for recovery efforts.

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HIGHLIGHTS

Pharmacy Professor Goff Receives $45,000 Engagement Impact Grant to Assist with Project in South Africa The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy Associate Professor Debra Goff received a $45,000 Engagement Impact Grant from Ohio State’s Office of Outreach and Engagement to assist with her project, “Ohio State and South Africa Collaborate to Combat Antibiotic Resistant ‘Superbugs.’” Goff’s project was launched in 2013 with funding from the College of Pharmacy and South African hospital collaborators, connecting South African pharmacists with Ohio State mentors to develop the necessary skill set to contribute to antibiotic stewardship. Goff, who specializes in infectious diseases, realized the need to develop this program after learning pharmacists in South Africa lack access to advanced clinical pharmacy training programs that specialize in infectious diseases. “Pharmaceutical companies have, for the most part, stopped producing new antibiotics because they are not profitable, which leaves the global health community running out of effective antibiotics to treat ‘superbugs,’” said Goff. “The lack of more effective antibiotics is not just a problem in countries like South Africa; it is a problem at places like Ohio State as well, so the development of pharmacists with

ate to Combat ”

skill sets to treat these ‘superbugs’ is essential to combat the global spread of these highly infectious organisms.” After Goff and her OSU colleague Karri Bauer spent one week working in the South African private and public sector hospitals, two pharmacists from the Netcare private hospitals in South Africa spent two weeks at Ohio State, learning about antibiotic stewardship in the OSU-South Africa “train the trainer” program. Their new clinical pharmacy skills are being used to educate their peers. Currently, South African pharmacists mainly are responsible for dispensing medications to patients, and clinical pharmacy is in its infancy in South Africa. However, these pharmacists understand the important role they can play in clinical settings, which is why Goff believes her program can lead to progress for clinical pharmacists. “South Africa is much like Ohio State was 30 years ago, when the PharmD program was just starting. Clinical pharmacists had to develop their role on the healthcare team and prove they made a difference in patient care,” said Goff. “The train the trainer program that we used to teach infectious diseases and antibiotic stewardship to these South African pharmacists could be applied to several other specialties to improve clinical pharmacy in South Africa.” The two South African pharmacists were able to spend time with several other clinical pharmacy specialists during their time at OSU. They were able to see firsthand how clinical pharmacists are involved in patient care and make a difference

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in patients’ lives. Many resources are taken for granted in the United States health care system but are unavailable in South Africa. The country does not have advanced clinical pharmacy training programs like the doctor of pharmacy (PharmD) programs the United States; even scholarly publications are difficult to access because they must pay for them. After completing the OSU train the trainer program, the two pharmacists created a podcast describing their experience at OSU and had their first research abstracts accepted to 16th International Congress on Infectious Diseases. They also used nontraditional methods to build awareness of their efforts. The Ohio State-South African collaboration helped train the pharmacists to advocate for antimicrobial stewardship and clinical pharmacy by teaching the pharmacists how to use Twitter to build awareness. They also developed an educational infectious diseases comic book to be used to train additional pharmacists in South Africa. “I know exactly what it is like to be in these pharmacists’ situation because very few physicians understood the value of clinical

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HIGHLIGHTS

Publications, Posters & Presentations Singrey AM, Mehta BH, Casper KA. Management of heart failure patients through integrative medical group visits. American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy; vol. 72 no. 5: 349-351; March 1, 2015. Yun-Wen Tang, Fan-Lu Kung, Karin Chiung-Sheue Chen Liu, Ling-Ling Hsieh, Kenneth M. Hale, and Yunn-Fang Ho. Determinants of Curricular Effectiveness for a Community Pharmacy Experiential Course. J Med Education 2014; 18(3): 32-42. Fahey Babeaux Holly P, Hall Laura E, Seifert Jennifer L. “Charitable pharmacy services: Impact on patientreported hospital use, medication access, and health status.” J Am Pharm Assoc. 2015; 55:58-64. doi: 10.1331/ JAPhA.2015.14010 Caldwell W, Emptage RE, Hall LE. Older adult acceptance of interventions following an academic-based comprehensive medication review. Poster presentation at American Society of Consultant Pharmacists Annual Meeting, November 5, 2014. LaBella S, Barnes KD. Medication related falls in the elderly. Central Ohio Licensed Practical Nurses Continuing Education Meeting in Columbus, Ohio (regional) on 10/25/14. Presented to 20 nurses in Ohio. LaBella S, Barnes KD. Clinical and economic impact of medication therapy management for a Medicaid managed care population in a patient-centered medical home. The Ohio Pharmacy Residency Conference on 5/15/14. Presented to pharmacists. Mehta B, Emptage RE, Rodis JL, Kwiek N, Sevin AM, Casper KA, Cable GL, Keeler E, Hale K Student pharmacists making a difference in their community. AACP Annual Meeting; Grapevine, TX; July 2014. AJPE 2014; 78(5) Article 111:130. Winhoven M, Casper K, Seifert J, Singrey A. Increasing pneumococcal vaccine uptake in underserved patients through reduction of barriers. Poster presentation at APhA 162nd Annual Meeting. San Diego, CA; March 2015. JAPhA 2015;55:2:e161. ...continued from page 10 pharmacists when I came to Ohio with a PharmD degree,” said Goff. “It is incredibly difficult to work toward advancing the practice of clinical pharmacy in South Africa when they have never seen a clinical pharmacist on patient care rounds with a physician in a hospital.” Despite the barriers that still exist for clinical pharmacists in South Africa, the program has been successful in helping establish proper use of antibiotics in clinical settings. The program’s initial success led to the $45,000 grant, which Goff says will be used to bring over South African pharmacists from public hospitals in the fall semester this year,

something that would have been extremely difficult without additional funding. “A key next step for our stewardship program is to educate pharmacists from public hospitals because they care for much larger populations than private hospitals in South Africa,” said Goff. “The challenge with bringing over pharmacists from public hospitals has been that these hospitals often do not have the resources to participate in a program like this, but this additional funding will make it possible.” Goff regularly speaks with the original two pharmacists about

FY 2015 Outreach & Engagement Annual Report

obstacles they face in their hospitals and advises them on how to manage these situations. She has been excited about the progress that has been made in a short amount of time. “Our goal is to be able to teach these pharmacists so they can go back to South Africa and teach future generations of pharmacists,” said Goff. “We are spreading the process of antimicrobial stewardship and are excited about how much bigger of an impact we believe this program can have. Importantly, we have built a network of collaboration between OSU and South African pharmacists.”

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HIGHLIGHTS Singrey AM, Casper KA, Pruchnicki MC, Seifert JL. Access to breathing medications in an uninsured and underinsured patient population. Podium presentation at Ohio Pharmacy Residency Conference. Ada, OH; May 2015 Brackett C. Medication use in elders: safety and efficacy. Express Scripts’ Staff Pharmacists, Columbus, OH on 9/23/14. Presented to 147 pharmacists. Emptage RE. How to utilize your pharmacist.” Presented at Central Ohio Alzheimer Association Meeting, Reynoldsburg, OH. April 22, 2015 to caregivers and social workers. Emptage RE. Medicare plan finder: A tool for pharmacists. Ohio Pharmacist Association Annual Meeting, Columbus, OH, April 17, 2015. Emptage RE. Generation Rx Senior Toolkit Demonstration. Ohio Northern University ASCP Student Chapter. Ada, OH, December 2, 2014. Kwiek NC The Generation Rx Initiative at The Ohio State University. Rx for Prevention National Conference: Preventing and Responding to Prescription Drug Abuse on Campus. Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, 6/11/14. Kwiek NC, Hale KM, Bullman WR, Kuszmaul E, Stevenson M. Resources for Collegiate Prescription Drug Abuse Prevention. Generation Rx University National Conference. Columbus, OH, 8/5/14. Kwiek NC and Hale KM. Moving from Tragedy to Making a Difference: Educational Tools for Prescription Drug Misuse Prevention. The GAP Network of Drug-Free Action Alliance State Conference. Columbus, OH, 12/6/14. Kwiek NC and McDaniel A. The Growing Prescription Drug Abuse Epidemic in Women. Ohio State University Center for Women’s Health Seminar Series. Columbus, OH, 12/10/14 Kwiek, NC. The Generation Rx Laboratory at COSI. The annual Science Writers national conference, a joint meeting of the National Association of Science Writers and the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing. Columbus, OH, 10/18/14. Downing M and Kwiek NC. The Generation Rx Lab: an innovative drug education research hub. Poster presentation at the “Explore Ohio State’s Community Engagement at COSI” event, Columbus, OH, 7/30/15 and OSU College of Pharmacy Research Day, Columbus, OH, 4/7/15. Hale KM, Mason D. Generation Rx Workplace: The Newest Population in the Generation Rx Toolbox to Help Prevent the Misuse and Abuse of Prescription Medications (Generation Rx Chapter VI). Academy of Pharmacy of Central Ohio, September 3, 2014 Molly Downing, assistant director of the Generation Rx Lab, and several student workers present their research at the annual College of Pharmacy Research Day. 12

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HIGHLIGHTS Hale KM, Kresser K, Mazzola J. Preventing the Misuse and Abuse of Prescription Medications. PharmD Student Orientation, Cedarville University, August 15, 2014. Hale KM, Walker B. Generation Rx: Preventing the Misuse and Abuse of Prescription Medications. National Association of Drug Diversion Investigators Annual Educational Training Conference, Cincinnati, November 19, 2014. Hale KM. Generation Rx University: Preventing the Misuse of Prescription Medications Among College Students. 2015 Drug Summit, Drug Free America Foundation, Tampa, February 24, 2015. Hale KM, Oser M, Walker B. Generation Rx Workshop. American Pharmacists Association Annual Meeting (Academy of Student Pharmacists), San Diego, March 29, 2015. Hale KM, Chan A, Schwartz V. Prevention Campaigns Targeting Young Adults. National Rx Drug Abuse Summit, Operation UNITE, Atlanta, April 7, 2015. Mehta B, Pruchnicki M. APhA Pharmacy-Based Immunization Delivery Certificate Program Presented to pharmacists as part of APhA national offering. Cincinnati, OH October 2014; Approximately 100 attendees. 8 CE hours Persky AM, McQueen CE, Mehta BH. Combatting the Dr. Oz Effect: Teaching Critical Thinking in Self-Care. AACP Annual Meeting. July 2014. Grapevine Texas. Rodis JL, Clark J, Awad M, Sevin A. MTM in FQHCs: Improving Chronic Disease Outcomes. Ohio Association of Community Health Centers Annual Meeting, Dublin, OH. September 16, 2014. Hu KM, Yates E, Gagne B, Rodis J. Project Adherence: use of a multi-faceted program to decrease abandoned prescriptions in a 340B population. Poster presented at APhA Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, the Ohio Pharmacists Association Annual Meeting, & the OSU IPEP Symposium. March 2015, April 2015, & May 2015 Kim H, Rodis JL, Brueggemeier R, Hale K. Global Pharmacy Initiatives at the Ohio State University College of Pharmacy. Panel presentation at International Scholarship Symposium, Columbus, OH. February 26, 2015 Rodis JL, Pryor B, Hornbeck C, Ballard A, Boyd E, Sevin A, Clark J, Wright K, Awad M, Adkins S. Expanding Medication Therapy Management (MTM) services in Federally-Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) through a statewide consortium. Poster presentation at American Pharmacists Association Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, March 2015 Porter B, Edelstein J, Bosold J, Lehman A, Rodis JL. Evaluating the Impact of a Student Peer-Mentoring Program on Student Skills Conducting Comprehensive Medication Reviews. American Pharmacists Association Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA, March 2015

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HIGHLIGHTS

Pharmacy Celebrates Its Schweitzer Fellows The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy congratulates our Albert Schweitzer Fellows Mary Vincent and Abbey Strazar, who just completed their year of service and became “Fellows for Life,” part of an alumni network, which includes some 3,000 physicians, nurses, lawyers, public health specialists, social workers, pharmacists, occupational therapists, and other leaders in health-related fields. As part of their service, Vincent and Strazar built upon a past fellow’s project to enhance hypertension outcomes and access to care for patients at Grace in the City Free

Clinic. The college also congratulates Andrea Lee and Godsfavour Umoru, this year’s newly announced fellows from Ohio State’s College of Pharmacy. They will become the fifth and sixth Schweitzer fellows from the college. For their project, Lee and Umoru are addressing the health of patients in downtown Columbus who have serious and persistent mental illnesses. They aim to improve the use of medications for these patients’ psychiatric and medical needs and reduce/prevent the occurrence of harmful drug events. Their community site is

Southeast Inc. Health Clinic.

Pharmacy Professor Rodis Receives Grant to Enhance Chronic Disease Outcomes for Ohio Patients

The Ohio Department of Health has awarded Associate Professor of Clinical Pharmacy Jennifer Rodis a $46,200 grant to increase medication therapy management (MTM) services provided by pharmacists to improve the health and wellness of underserved Ohio citizens living with chronic diseases. The project expands MTM services to patients cared for in Ohio’s Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC). FQHCs care for patients in 14

underserved areas or populations in accordance with the Affordable Care Act.

of MTM services and patient care enhancement in FQHCs across the state of Ohio.”

Representatives from all colleges of pharmacy in Ohio will contribute to a consortium to support the expansion of MTM services in the state’s FQHCs. Other partners include MSAG, the Ohio Pharmacists Association, the Ohio Association of Community Health Centers, the Ohio Department of Health and four FQHC sites: Axess Pointe, Primary One Health, Health Partners of Western Ohio and Kroger Co.

Phase one of the project lasted through June 2015; phase two commenced July 2015.

“Phase one of this project will engage four FQHCs with distinct pharmacist care models and geographic diversity to measure the impact of pharmacist-provided MTM on chronic diseases, specifically in patients with diabetes and hypertension,” said Rodis. “Data collected from phase one will feed into the creation of a phase two plan that will support the expansion

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“We are excited for faculty, students, residents, pharmacists and pharmacies from all over Ohio to be involved in launching this project,” said Rodis. “This endeavor brings best practices from across the state together. We aim to promote and serve as a resource to support expansion of pharmacist-provided MTM and, thus, help Ohio’s citizens make the best use of their medications for optimal health and wellness.”

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AREA UPDATES

Advocacy Project Lead: Jennifer Rodis Collaborators: Students, faculty, and residents As the profession of pharmacy moves forward, it is important for pharmacists to have a voice at the table. Through numerous efforts of faculty, students, and residents, our college continues to advocate for pharmacy through a variety of initiatives. Highlights: • Stuart Beatty, associate professor of clinical pharmacy, testified in the Ohio House of Representative’s Health & Aging Committee for House Bill 188. The bill would better enable pharmacists to enter into agreements with groups of doctors to manage patient therapy for their patients. PGY2 residents helped develop testimony for the bill. • Kelsey Kresser (P2 student) and Rose Pavlakos (PGY1 resident) testified for House Bill 4 to support dispensing naloxone by pharmacists to families and caregivers in the event of opioid overdose. • Faculty wrote 16 letters to legislators. • Faculty had 5 visits with legislators. • Student organizations held two letter writing campaigns to encourage students, faculty, and staff to engage with advocacy for provider status. • Marialice Bennett made a visit to legislators in Washington D.C. to advocate for provider status with two PGY2 pharmacy practice residents in the Spring of 2015.

Kelsey Kresser (P2 student) and Rose Pavlakos (PGY1 resident) testified for House Bill 4.

Continuing Professional Development Project Lead: Bella Mehta Collaborators: Ashley Knackstedt, Emily Keeler, Adam Betz, Casey Hoerig Newly established, the Office of Continuing Professional Development (CPD) has been focused on three main areas: 1) conducting a needs assessment regarding preceptor development and professional development in order to formulate a business plan, 2) leading an advisory task force for the development of a Center for the Advancement of Pharmacy Practice, and 3) establishing the technology infrastructure needed to produce and provide CPD. Highlights • The Office of Continuing Professional Development was established to revive and expand previous CPD activities. Bella Mehta was appointed the director. • Development of a Center for the Advancement of Pharmacy Practice began. The task force overseeing its creation hosted a consultant, Maria Bystrin, formerly Assistant Dean of Continuing Professional Development and Strategic Initiatives, University of Toronto. • Established and formally trained key faculty for several APhA Certificate Training Programs in order to offer the programs through the college. • Designed and published a web-based CPD program delivery and registration system • Provided six continuing education programs for 2014-2015. • Established a plan for quarterly offerings for preceptor development for residency preceptors. FY 2015 Outreach & Engagement Annual Report

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AREA UPDATES

Ohio State Professor Lends Testimony to HB 188 Stuart Beatty, PharmD, BSPS, associate professor of Clinical Pharmacy at The Ohio State University, testified in the Ohio House of Representative’s Health & Aging Committee for House Bill 188. The bill, sponsored by representatives Nathan Manning and Stephen Huffman, would better enable pharmacists to enter into agreements with groups of doctors to manage patient therapy for their patients. Currently, pharmacists can only enter into a singular consult agreement with one doctor and one patient. “Under the current version of the law, a separate consult agreement must be entered into for each individual whose drug therapy is to be managed by a pharmacist,” Beatty testified. “It further states that a consult agreement applies only to the particular diagnosis for which a physician prescribed an individual’s drug therapy. With 38 attending physicians and more than 90 medical residents, having

a separate consult agreement for each patient is not feasible.” With this bill, pharmacists would have the ability to add, remove, or alter a patient’s drug therapy and order blood or urine tests if approved by the physician. This makes access to care easier for individuals who live in rural or under-served areas and may be quite a distance from their physician. “Our physicians refer patients to our services because they trust and depend on our clinical judgement and because allowing us to manage their patients with medication-related needs allows them more time to see patients with more complex medical needs,” continued Beatty. “Their referral is a partnership in which they trust us to make clinical decisions in the best interest of the patient. Based on years of experience working together as a healthcare team, our recommended plans are rarely met with disagreement from the physicians, making the process

of gaining approval more of a logistical burden than a necessity. The proposed changes in HB 188 will improve the efficiency of this process and provide further opportunities for physicianpharmacist partnerships, allowing more patients to benefit from the healthcare services provided by the pharmacist.” In addition to expanding the role pharmacists play in patient care, a second part of the bill would expand a pharmacist’s ability to dispense emergency supplies of medications in the event a patient is out refills, and the doctor can’t be reached for a new prescription. The bill would change the current law of allowing pharmacists to dispense a 72-hour supply, to allow up to a 30-day supply or the smallest unit of measurement available for medications for life-threatening disease states. Many medications— such as insulin for diabetes—cannot be dispersed in limited amounts due to their packaging units. This bill eliminates the hurdles and risks associated with patients going without their medications in the event a new prescription cannot be obtained. The original bill draft was crafted by Senator Dave Burke (who is also a pharmacist from Marysville) in cooperation with the Ohio Pharmacists Association, Ohio Society of Health-System Pharmacists, and the Ohio State Medical Association. Sen. Burke and Sen. Gayle Manning introduced that bill, SB 141, earlier this year. HB 188 was modeled after SB 141, and both have had multiple hearings in their respective chamber’s committees. The SB 141 was successfully voted out of the Senate Health & Human Services Committee on June 17, and we are awaiting a vote on HB 188.

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Generation Rx Project Lead: Ken Hale, Nicole Kwiek Collaborators: Cindy Clouner, Emily Keeler, The Generation Rx Collaborative Student Organization Community Partners: Cardinal Health Foundation, Drug Free Action Alliance Generation Rx began at The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy in 2007 as a program to enhance medication safety and combat the increasing misuse and abuse of prescription drugs through educational prevention. Partnering with the Cardinal Health Foundation, the program has created toolkits aimed at specific audiences that are available to the public at no cost. Highlights: • The College of Pharmacy partnered with the new Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Drug Misuse Prevention and Recovery. • Conducted extensive research for the “next phase” of Generation Rx • Partnered with the Cardinal Health Foundation to implement the next phase of Generation Rx and create a more interactive website. • The Pharmacy Alumni Society selected Generation Rx as the philanthropic recipient of the inaugural Pharmathon 5K race on Ohio State’s campus. • The Generation Rx Collaborative was launched. This new student group has representatives from the many student groups in the college in one organization to better organize outreach efforts. • Generation Rx and the Drug Free Action Alliance strengthened their partnership with a joint position to manage the Ohio College Initiative. Cindy Clouner started in the Spring of 2015. • The Generation Rx University Voices Blog was launched. The publication covers the latest topics, trends, and stories from the field of prescription drug misuse prevention among college students. Learn more at generationrx.org

Top: Pharmacy student Divya Verma leads Brutus Buckeye through a pharmacology experiment. Bottom: Participants at the start of the 2015 Pharmathon. FY 2015 Outreach & Engagement Annual Report

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Generation Rx Lab at COSI Project Lead: Nicole Kwiek Collaborators: Molly Downing, undergraduate pharmacy students, Community Partners: Cardinal Health Foundation, The Ohio State University Office of Research The Generation Rx Lab is a fun, innovative educational experience at the Center of Science and Industry (COSI). In this space within the Life exhibit, visitors of all ages can conduct engaging, hands-on experiments as they learn about the science of drugs. Highlights: •

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In 2014, 3 P4 students completed an APPE rotation in the lab. APPE students also lead our live educational programs, as well as create and develop a new educational program for use in the lab. Each semester, 10-15 BSPS students staff the lab’s educational programs as a unique opportunity to practice and improve their science communication skills. There are currently three educational studies being conducted in the lab: 1. Assessing the experimental impact of clinical medicine simulations on a COSI guest’s ability to learn science, understand medication safety principals, and build interest in health-related careers. 2. Assessing the experiential impact of K-12 students participating in one of our educational programs during a formal field trip. 3. Measuring the specific science and medication safety principles COSI families are learning by conducting one of our pharmacologyfocused hands-on experiments. Developed programming that utilizes a high fidelity human patient simulator, a tool often exclusive to health professionals for medical training purposes. P4 APPE students helped create four distinct educational programs that engage the general public in learning about diabetes, asthma, allergies/ anaphylactic shock, and mild heart attacks.

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Global Initiatives Project Lead: Helen Kim Collaborators: Robert Brueggemeier, Ken Hale, Jennifer Rodis Community Partners: Office of International Affairs, Ohio State; Global Gateways, Ohio State; Kroger Pharmacy on Morse Road; US Together; University of Michigan; University of Minnesota; China Pharmaceutical University (CPU) China; Fudan University (FU), China; Peking University (PU), China/ Shenyang Pharmaceutical University (SPU), China; China; China Medical University CMU) Taiwan; National Taiwan University (NTU), Taiwan; Taipei Medial University (TMU), Taiwan The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy partners with a number of international partners to provide services and education to people around the globe in a variety of settings and needs. Highlights: • Helen Kim was brought on as the first Global Pharmacy Practice and Education Fellow at the college. • Students continued to provide the orientation program called “Introduction to Pharmacy” to new refugees coming to Central Ohio. • Hosted two National Taiwan University and two China Medical University students. • Hosted two international faculty who trained at the Ohio State Wexner Medical Center. • Welcomed two Chinese delegations in the fall of 2014 to visit the OSU college of pharmacy • A new memorandum of agreement (MOA) was signed with several Colleges of Pharmacy in China including CPU, FU, PU, and SPU to engage Chinese students in PharmD programs in the US. This endeavor involves OSU, the University of Michigan, and the University of Minnesota. • Dr. Jim McAuley visited China to build relationships with colleges of pharmacy engaged in the MOA in the spring of 2015. • The first international student meeting for all College of Pharmacy students from undergraduate, graduate, and professional programs was held.

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Students Provide Classes on U.S. Medication System to Newly Resettled Refugees For many refugees and immigrants new to the United States, the American healthcare system can be confusing and daunting. If they are not fluent in English, this can compound the problem. Pharmacy students at Ohio State are trying to help these refugees through targeted health system classes offered at the Kroger Pharmacy on Morse Road.

interpreter to explain topics such as how medicine is classified, how to read a prescription label, and how to use a pharmacy in the United States. Information is also distributed on how to obtain translation services when they visit the pharmacy. This class allows the attendees to not only learn the process, but also offers a chance to ask questions in a friendly environment.

Each month students meet with refugees, resettlement staff and an

Laura Smith from US Together, a refugee resettlement agency that helps refugees find employment,

said the experience is valuable to their introduction to America. “Many of the refugees come from Bhutan and have been living in camps. They have not had the chance to use a pharmacy like we have here in the United States. This is something that people tend to overlook. It is something they all need, especially for those with families. It’s helpful to come first when they don’t need services, so when they do need that help they are able to access it.” US Together was established in 2003 to help refugees resettle in the US by providing English as a Second Language (ESL) classes, employment services and educational workshops--including pharmacy--to help them better understand living in the United States.

P1 Geriatric Experience Project Lead: Ruth Emptage Collaborators: Donald Bennett, Bonnie Spiers, Donnie Sullivan, all P1 students, P4 students Community Partners: Various National Church Residence Independent Living Sites / Gillie 50+ Recreational Center / Griswold Center / Hilliard Senior Center / The Forum at Knightsbridge / Evans Senior Center / Villages at Westerville / Jewish Community Center / The Village at Ottawa Ridge / Village Place / Grovewood Place / Seton South / Seton Washington Court House / Westminster Thurber Community The P1 Geriatric Program places groups of 4-5 students at various independent living or senior centers to interact with older adults and provide some basic health education while also offering comprehensive medication reviews. The experience requires students to utilize one of the interactive activities from the Generation Rx Senior Toolkit at their site with the participants. Students also offer to help evaluate Medicare Part D plans in the Fall for anyone wanting assistance. 20

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Partner for Promotion Project Lead: Jennifer Rodis Collaborators: Mary Higginbotham, Emily Keeler, Joni Warren, 17 PharmD students, 2 PGY1 Community Practice residents Community Partners: CVS Pharmacy (1 site) / Foster’s Pharmacy (1 site) / Giant Eagle Pharmacy (1 site) / Kroger Pharmacy (3 sites) / Meijer Pharmacy (1 site) / Southeast, Inc (1 site) / Walgreens Pharmacy (1 site) Partner for Promotion (PFP) aims to expand quality patient care services in community-based pharmacy practices. By empowering current and future pharmacists to create sustainable services, the program advances the role of the pharmacist in the health care team, improve outcomes, and increase patient access to care. Highlights: • 9 pharmacy sites created novel services in the community to enhance direct patient care including transitions of care, diabetes management, immunization screening, and medication therapy management. • A new PFP university, Ferris State University, rolled out their first year of the program for a total of six active partner universities. • Held an advisory group meeting in the Fall of 2014 • Collaborated with PFP faculty across the country to conduct scholarly work; one paper was accepted for publication. • The second annual Daniel B. and Rita F. Waitzman Community Pharmacy Scholarship was awarded to Kai Ming Hu and Erin Yates.

Pills, Potions, and Poisons Project Lead: Molly Downing Collaborators: Nicole Kwiek, Katie Rooney, teaching assistants Luke Bramlage, Sarah Jones, Michael Murphy, Nira Kadakia and Sharon Emery The Pills, Potions and Poisons program provides students with an overview of pharmacology and its relationship to health, disease and society. In the field of pharmacology, scientists study the interactions between drugs and the body and then apply what they have learned to the development of new drugs. 48 high school students participated in the summer of 2014 and 49 are expected for 2015 for a total of 312 students to date who have completed the program since 2008.

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AREA UPDATES adherence and aims to prevent future illness and serious health complications to improve the quality of life of every American who suffers from both acute and chronic conditions. For more information on this program visit http://www.scriptyourfuture.org.

Waitzman Pharmacy Scholarship Established at College of Pharmacy Ohio State Students “Script” Futures for East Side Seniors Students from The Ohio State University colleges of Pharmacy, Medicine, and Public Health have been hard at work at the Ward Family YMCA, meeting with area residents to help them get the most from their medications. These students are educating the public about the importance of taking medications properly through “Script Your Future,” a national program to increase medication adherence. According to the National Council on Patient information and Education (NCPIE), nearly three out of four Americans admit that they don’t always take their medication as directed. There can be many reasons for this, and through a thorough medication review with the patient, the students are able to uncover medications being taken, how they are being taken, and how patients may be able to increase compliance and thus better health outcomes. “A lot of people aren’t aware of how much impact taking medications properly can have on your health,” said Natalie Park, a second-year pharmacy student. “Not taking them properly can decrease effectiveness or even create adverse consequences. We try to find strategies to help them.” Prior to starting the project, students attended events and classes in order to become a part of the community and reach their patients on a personal level. “Script your Future” educates the general public about the disease states and the importance of medication 22

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The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy is pleased to announce the establishment of a scholarship to expand student opportunities in community health. The Daniel B. and Rita F. Waitzman Community Pharmacy Scholarship Fund is designed to assist doctor of pharmacy, PharmD, candidates enrolled in the college’s Partner for Promotion Program (PFP) who have shown a strong commitment to community pharmacy. The program allows students to work for a year with participating pharmacies, while receiving training and mentorship by faculty involved with The Ohio State University Partner for Promotion program, to design and implement a program to provide expanded quality patient care services in community pharmacies. Daniel Waitzman had a distinguished career in pharmacy spanning sixty-five years as a licensed pharmacist, serving as President of the Academy of Pharmacy of Central Ohio, and was the recipient of numerous honors in pharmacy, including the OSU College of Pharmacy’s Distinguished Alumni Award. Rita, in her own right, is well-known in pharmacy circles and at the college as well. Daniel’s Pharmacy was a landmark in Columbus, where Daniel, with the help and support of Rita, served the community at Main and Ohio for close to fifty years, providing quality pharmacy services to an area and population that did not have easy access to pharmaceutical care. In April 2014, Grace Kilbane and Hyun-Su Helen Kim were the inaugural recipients of the award. In collaboration with Kroger Pharmacy and their preceptor, Ben Michaels, they developed a sustainable model of education to recently resettled refugees in the U.S. about how to engage with the community pharmacy to receive medicine and care. This innovative project addressed a major need in the community and the team

The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy


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Support Outreach and Engagement Activities at the College of Pharmacy We could not do the work we do without the generous support of donors like you. Give to one of our outreach programs today! Name _________________________________________________ Email _________________________________________________ ...continued from page 22

embodied the characteristics this fund was established to recognize. The OSU Partner for Promotion Program has engaged sixty-four participating pharmacies throughout the State of Ohio, as well as in the states of Kentucky, West Virginia and the State of Washington. The program was started at OSU in 2005 by Jennifer Rodis, who serves as the Director of Partner for Promotion at the College of Pharmacy. In this time, because of its success and the recognized need to expand pharmaceutical services to diverse areas and settings, the Partner for Promotion Program has been adopted by other colleges and schools of pharmacy across the country to implement PFP at their institutions. “This scholarship honors the outstanding pharmacy legacy of Daniel and Rita Waitzman by awarding the pharmacy innovators of tomorrow. We are grateful to the Waitzman family for their continued impact on the growth of pharmacy in Ohio,” said Rodis. More information regarding the OSU Partner for Promotion Program can be found at the following link: http://www.pharmacy.ohio-state. edu/outreach/partner-promotion

Address _______________________________________________ City ________________________ State _______ Zip ___________ Phone ________________________________________________ I want to support the following fund(s): ___ Cardinal Health Foundation Continuing Education - Fund 313836 ___ Generation Rx - Fund 313192 ___ Global Pharmacy Initiatives - Fund 313443 ___ Innovative Community Pharmacy Practice - Fund 302103 ___ James Pharmacy Educational Development - Fund 313432 ___ Partner for Promotion - Fund 312834 ___ Pharmacy Outreach and Engagement - Fund 312698 ___ Stephen W. Birdwell Student Award - Fund 313677 ___ The Daniel B. and Rita F. Waitzman Community Pharmacy Scholarship - Fund 647515 ___ The Family Aids Clinical Education & Services Program - Fund 311826 ___ The Richard H. and Judith B. Reuning Fund for Service Learning in Pharmacy - Fund 646050 Please make checks out to “The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy Fund [insert fund number here]” Mail checks to: The Ohio State University College of Pharmacy Outreach and Engagement. 500 W. 12th Avenue. Columbus, Ohio 43210 You may also give online to these and other funds at give.osu.edu.

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Office of Outreach and Engagement 500 W. 12th Avenue Columbus, Ohio 43210 pharmacy.osu.edu/outreach


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