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St. Vincent de Paul Charitable Pharmacy Provides $5M in Medication

by Walter Jessen on Monday, February 22, 2010

St-Vincent-de-Paul

The St. Vincent de Paul (SVDP) Charitable Pharmacy in Cincinnati, Ohio, announced last week that it surpassed $5.1 million dollars worth of medication dispensed to help people in need since it opened in September 2006 [1]. The Charitable Pharmacy is the only pharmacy in southwest Ohio that provides free, professional pharmaceutical care to people in need.

The Charitable Pharmacy was established in 2005 in partnership with the Academy of Medicine of Cincinnati as a pilot project designed to provide free, professional pharmaceutical care to those unable to pay for discounted medication, those who don’t qualify for other programs, and those who simply need help navigating the options available for prescription medication. According to Liz Carter, Executive Director, Society of St. Vincent de Paul [1]:

There are more than 270,000 people in Greater Cincinnati without health insurance. One out of every 10 households locally has a family member who forgoes prescription medication in order to afford food, clothing or housing. We see individuals from every corner of our community who are suffering from illnesses but have no way to afford medication. Our pharmacy is a last resort for them.

The Charitable Pharmacy carefully screens people that need help, including the homeless, people who have lost their jobs, the working poor who cannot afford prescription insurance or pharmacy co-pays, and people that need temporary assistance as they try to get coverage, qualify for other assistance programs or reach a gap in Medicare coverage.

The Society of St. Vincent de Paul in Cincinnati is a non-profit organization that works personally with those in need, regardless of race or creed, to bridge the spiritual, emotional and material gaps in their lives through home visits provided by neighborhood-based volunteer groups, as well as groundbreaking initiatives like the Charitable Pharmacy.

Almost all of the medication at the Charitable Pharmacy is donated by twenty private physician’s practices, Skilled Care, KeySource Medical, the Ohio Drug Repository Program, and drugmakers Astra Zeneca and Novartis.

In 2010, the St. Vincent de Paul Charitable Pharmacy in Cincinnati anticipates providing more than 25,000 prescriptions valued at over $2 million dollars, and is is in need of financial donations, donations of sample medication form physician offices and pharmaceuticals from long-term care pharmacies. For more information, see http://www.SVDPcincinnati.org.

References

  1. St. Vincent de Paul Charitable Pharmacy Announces Major Milestone: $5.1 Million in Prescription Medication Dispensed. Saint Vincent de Paul, Cincinnati. 2010 Feb 17.
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Rehabilitation at Home Just as Good as Day Hospital Care

by Faith Martin on Friday, September 18, 2009

ResearchBlogging.org

As you or perhaps your parents get older, would you want to be at home when recovering from an illness? Would the choice between home rehabilitation or visits to a day hospital make a difference to your recovery and health? Which is cheaper for the healthcare services? A recent study published in the journal Health Technology Assessment (HTA) shows that home-based care in the United Kingdom is no worse than attendance at a day hospital for older adults [1].
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The Spectrum Health Value Study: Insured vs. Uninsured

by Walter Jessen on Thursday, August 6, 2009

In May, we wrote about the Spectrum Health Value Study, an ongoing national online survey where Americans are asked what they value when it comes to healthcare products and services. The survey evaluates 27 programs, products and services categories used by the U.S. government for measuring economic activity in various sectors of the economy. Every three months, Spectrum, a public relations and public affairs firm based in Washington DC, interviews 1,000 people and asks them to identify from the 27 healthcare products, programs and services those ever used and how satisfied they were with each. The ongoing study can be used to identify the relative value Americans place in healthcare programs, products and services, and how the value changes over time.

spectrum-health-value-study

Insured and uninsured

The most recent Spectrum Health Value Study data was used to compare answers from insured and uninsured respondents. As Congress recesses for the month of August to talk with their constituents about the current healthcare legislation under consideration in the U.S. House and Senate, these data offer a glimpse into what insured and uninsured Americans value in healthcare.
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The Spectrum Health Value Study

by Walter Jessen on Thursday, May 21, 2009

According to a new survey called the Spectrum Health Value Study, when Americans were asked to value their most important health product and/or service as they consider spending their own money, they chose access to care over everything else [1]. Respondents indicated that access to physician services, medical services at a hospital and emergency care services are their most essential and highest valued health priorities.

spectrum-health-value-study

The Institute of Medicine Roundtable on Evidence-Based Medicine brings together leaders from key healthcare sectors to accelerate the collaborative work necessary to drive improvements in the effectiveness and efficiency of medical care. According to a Roundtable issue brief published earlier this year [2]:

While the U.S. has the highest per capita spending on health care of any industrialized nation, health outcomes lag those achieved elsewhere. The increasing costs of care are reducing access to care and constitute an ever heavier burden on employers and consumers. To address both the costs and the performance of the health care system, greater consensus will be required on what constitutes value in health care, and how to measure and increase that value.

Indeed, value is a relative term – what’s valuable to me may not be valuable to you. With policymakers looking to overhaul the U.S. healthcare system, one way to quantify and compare the value of health programs, products and services is to ask consumers and taxpayers.
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