Q&A

Defining Pharmacy Leadership in the VA

Two pharmacists delve into the attributes of successful leadership at the VA.

Ashley L. Adams, PharmD, PGY2/MS pharmacy administration resident at the Michael E. DeBakey VAMC in Houston, Texas, recently spoke about leadership development with Julie A. Groppi, PharmD, the VACO PBM National Program Manager, Clinical Pharmacy Practice Policy & Standards. Dr. Groppi has worked in a variety of VA leadership and clinical capacities for more than 19 years and was associate chief of the West Palm Beach VAMC before accepting her current position in 2011. Below is an excerpt from a longer conversation. The complete and unedited transcript can be found at www.fedprac.com.


 

Ashley L. Adams, PharmD. What are the key leadership attributes of pharmacy leaders?

Julie A. Groppi, PharmD. As a pharmacy leader, you have to be confident in what you do as a pharmacist and not only look at what you are doing now but what you can do in the future. You always have to look for that next apple to pick, because you have to be willing to accept change and help influence change, even though many people do not like change. As a supervisor, I ran a large and growing clinical pharmacy program. I remember many colleagues saying, “You mean, I have to do this now?” I would always try to bring the conversation around with staff to ensure that the benefit of the change or ‘what is in it for you’ was included in the approach. If you are a leader, communicating with physicians, pharmacists, or VA leadership, you just need to sell it to show why it is important and how the change will improve the process. If you don’t, then you won’t be able facilitate or sustain the momentum needed for change.

One important aspect of being a change leader is to make sure you listen (and talk) to those working in the area on a daily basis when you are going through your processes and trying to create change on what is going happen. It is important to make sure your stakeholders are involved and heard while you think about all of your potential obstacles; this is something that I always have tried to do. Also, reflecting on where you have been and what you have done will help you to think differently and is something you should do both professionally and personally. I may not need to know every aspect of the process, but I need to know the obstacles to figure out ways to prevent or break down those walls and solve those underlying issues.

Dr. Adams. What are some of the challenges and opportunities you have found in pharmacy leadership

Dr. Groppi. I think the challenges [are related to] the sheer volume of work that is out there. Having the ability to be able to separate and think about where you want your team to go is the challenge of any leader. When you are right in the middle of it, you tend to focus on the task at hand to get the work done. One week, it is pain management, and then the next week it is hepatitis C, and then it’s assessing acute care services, then gaps or problems somewhere else. There are always different obstacles and different initiatives (pressures) coming at you. You have to not lose your sense of where you want to go. Often, many people cannot stop and look at the whole picture.

I joined the Clinical Pharmacy Practice office in 2011, and one of the first things we were challenged with when the office started was to write guidelines, create policies, and develop tools that would help guide the practice. However, when we started sending out resources to the field, many people were too busy with what was going on at their local facility to focus on what we had developed, so we had to step back. We brainstormed some ideas and looked at our peers in other offices who had demonstrated success. When we started discussing pharmacist scope of practice agreements, I looked at nursing service and their movement related to scope of practice and how it had impacted change in the profession over the past several years.

Nursing has great infrastructure and support for its program. They created many different types of clinical practice councils within nursing, and they were able to institute a lot of changes and spread their initiatives. We thought, “Why don’t we do this for clinical pharmacy?” So we started doing more outreach to the different sites and had discussions with our advisory board, which resulted in the development of the National Clinical Pharmacy Practice Council (NCPPC). We promoted facility and VISN councils to start talking about practice issues and regularly discussing our initiatives as a part of teleconferences, so we could gain support and keep the momentum. Now the NCPPC has grown and everyone is excited about what is happening. It is having a multipronged effect to impact clinical practice.

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