Article
Annual Meeting inspires pharmacists to work together to improve health care system for patients.
PRESS RELEASE
WASHINGTON, DC — The American Pharmacists Association (APhA) Annual Meeting & Exposition, APhA2015, held March 27­­—30, drew nearly 6,000 pharmacists and student pharmacists from every pharmacy practice setting to San Diego. Attendees heard from pharmacy thought-leaders about the many changes and challenges facing the pharmacy profession.
This year’s theme, Advancing As One, speaks to how, by rallying together, pharmacists can earn the recognition they deserve and simultaneously change the nation’s view of their role in the health care system. As individuals and as a whole, pharmacists possess the strength to launch the collaborative health care team forward to improve health outcomes for patients. The expertise, insights and enthusiasm practitioners gained at APhA2015 will fuel their efforts and spread to other pharmacists across the country.
APhA2015 general sessions were headlined by engaging speakers:
APhA 2015-2016 President, L.B. Brown, PharmD, PhD, FAPhA, delivered his presidential address, Expanding Opportunities thru Patient Care, at the Second General Session, stating, “‘Pharmacists Provide Care, let me tell you about it’ will be my focus over the next year, and I ask you to join me in spreading the word. My vision is that pharmacist-provided care in all practice settings will be as common and as expected as flu shots in the pharmacy are today. My vision for the pharmacy profession is for us to be bigger, better, stronger and more effective at improving the lives of patients than we ever have been before. Some would say, as Walt Kelly did, ‘We have met the enemy and he is us.’ But I say, ‘We today can be the heroes of pharmacy.’ We have the knowledge. We have a commitment to safety. We have the capability. We have the heart and the desire to revolutionize what it means to be a pharmacist. We have the ability to literally change the definition of pharmacist in the dictionary.
“APhA cannot revolutionize the profession alone. We can only capture your good work and lift it up to be appreciated by all. And if we don't revolutionize pharmacy, we will forever be left with a bitter taste in our mouths about what could have been. It is imperative that we take President Kennedy's admonition and ‘ask not what your profession can do for you, but what you can do for the profession.’ And what you can do starts with one simple little sentence: ‘Pharmacists provide care, let me tell you about it.’ Help APhA revolutionize the profession. All I ask is that once a day for five days, you say that one sentence to one person. An ancient proverb says you can eat an elephant if you eat it one bite at a time. Well our elephant is provider status, and we can achieve that if we do it one day at a time, one patient at a time, and spread the word one sentence at a time. ‘Pharmacists provide care, let me tell you about it!’
During the meeting, the APhA House of Delegates voted on three proposed policies:
Several new business items were also introduced for consideration by the House:
For outcomes of the deliberations, visit http://pharmacist.com/house-of-delegates.
APhA has started preparations for APhA2015, Expanding Opportunities through Patient Care, March 4—7, in Baltimore. For information on future meetings, contact APhA staff or visit www.aphameeting.org.
About the American Pharmacists Association
The American Pharmacists Association, founded in 1852 as the American Pharmaceutical Association, is a 501 (c)(6) organization, representing more than 62,000 practicing pharmacists, pharmaceutical scientists, student pharmacists, pharmacy technicians and others interested in advancing the profession. APhA, dedicated to helping all pharmacists improve medication use and advance patient care, is the first-established and largest association of pharmacists in the United States. For more information, please visit www.pharmacist.com.