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  • Title: Implementation of mobile decentralized pharmaceutical services in a community teaching hospital.
    Author: Cummins BA, Kvancz DA, Bennett DL, Fontana LC.
    Journal: Am J Hosp Pharm; 1987 Feb; 44(2):318-24. PubMed ID: 3565390.
    Abstract:
    Administrative strategies that were used to justify mobile decentralized pharmaceutical services in a community teaching hospital are discussed. The report describes the problems prompting the pharmacy's review of its centralized unit dose drug distribution and i.v. admixture services, the evaluation of alternative solutions, the proposal submitted to hospital administrators, the implementation process, and an analysis of fiscal impact. A decentralized system using mobile medication carts was considered the best alternative because it integrated distributive and clinical functions and offered efficiencies in drug distribution; anticipated capital expenditure costs and personnel costs were also lower than the costs of alternatives. The conversion to the new system increased the pharmacy personnel budget by $174,455 annually, representing the addition of 13.8 full-time equivalent (FTE) pharmacists and elimination of 10.4 FTE technicians and interns. The increased personnel budget was offset in fiscal year (FY) 1982-83 by documented savings of $47,000 from pharmacists' clinical activities and by calculated savings of $132,400 in nursing time. Excluding capital expenditures of $19,800 for the medication carts, implementing mobile decentralized services saved the hospital $4945 in FY 1982-83. Mobile decentralized services is a cost-effective approach for providing integrated drug distribution and clinical pharmacy services.
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