Volume 2 Issue 4
Focus On:
Feature
Interview: Shirley Lockhart, Business Manager for the Veterinary
Specialty Center of Delaware
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In a recent issue, we reported on
data collected by the National Commission of Veterinary Economic
Issues (NCVEI) showing that veterinarians are more efficient
and earn significantly more money when they hire practice managers.
Shirley Lockhart, business manager the Veterinary
Specialty Center of Delaware, a referral-only practice in
Wilmington, has the personal experience to back the stats: “By
allowing the doctors to be doctors you allow them to have more
revenue-generating time,” she says. “It's my job to make sure
they have properly trained technicians to support them and to
assure that payroll is in the bank. That allows them to focus
on medicine.” |
Shirley, who holds an M.B.A. degree, started with the practice in
1999 and has guided the practice to behave like the business it is.
With 15 full- and part-time veterinarians practicing eight medical
specialties and 35 technicians and other staff, that's not a luxury.
“When we implemented our first five-year strategic plan, it was agonizing
for the doctors. There had never been a formal plan previously. Vets
don't make good managers because they are very sensitive people,”
she remarks, “or they wouldn't be in this profession. I'm not in
sensitive but I am trained to do this.”
Today, every aspect of the practice's growth, from adding new veterinary
specialties through purchasing equipment to building a soon-needed
addition, is on a timeline, in the plan. Under Shirley's guidance,
the practice also has a comprehensive marketing plan and program
that includes graphic branding, a Web site, brochures for referring
veterinarians and their clients, magazine advertising and publicity.”
Shirley continues, “We have two primary customers: the referring
vet and their clients. We're very focused on customer satisfaction.
We say that the front desk is the heart of our practice and the
back is our pulse. If our referring veterinarian's clients aren't
handled properly up front they never make it to the back and therefore
the revenue doesn't come through the door.” To ensure the kind of
service that delights, Shirley has two supervisors on her staff,
one focused on the front of the house, and one on the back.
| What role does a compounding pharmacy play in a practice like
this one: “We use compounding a lot. I suppose we could find
a way to live without it but we certainly wouldn't want to.
We'd have to find another way to get the same results,” she
offers. “You want a pleasant person on the phone, someone who
understands what you're asking for and can deliver the goods
in an efficient way. That's why we use Wedgewood most of the
time. When we need something urgently, while a client is in
our office, we use a little drug store up the street that does
some compounding.” |
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We asked Shirley if she has advice for her peers: “Yes,” she says
without hesitation, “the doctors in veterinary medicine need to
rely on their managers and give them the opportunity to manage.
It would make everyone's lives so much easier.”
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In the News
Ninth
State Includes Pets and Service Animals in Disaster Plans
In June, Illinois becomes the ninth U.S. state to have a law mandating
emergency operations plans prepared by any political subdivision
in the state to include “plans that take into account the needs
of those individuals with household pets and service animals following
a major disaster or emergency. According to dvm magazine,
this type of legislation represents states “adjusting to prevent
what happened during Hurricane Katrina: thousands of pets and owners
[were] separated because many federal and state laws did not include
arrangements for owners and their animals.” The other states to
have passed similar laws include California, Florida, Hawaii, Louisiana,
Maine, New Hampshire, New jersey, New York and Vermont. Six other
states have related resolutions on record or pending legislation.
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Veterinary
Practice Manager Certification Program is Accredited
The Veterinary Hospital Managers Association's Certified Veterinary
Practice Manager certification program has been accredited through
the National Commission for Certifying Agencies, the accreditation
commission of the National Organization for Competency Assurance.
To earn accreditation, the CVPM program underwent intensive review
demonstrating compliance with the strict standards set by NCCA for
verifying professional competency. This evaluation included every
aspect of the CVPM certification program, including: administrative
procedures, job analysis, test development, test security, standard
setting, eligibility criteria, board responsibilities, ongoing review
of all policies and procedures, and verification of reliability
and validity of the credential.
Fat: Fry It or Fly It?
It really does take a rocket scientist to coax jet fuel out of
animal fat. Not to mention a chemical and biomolecular engineer
as well as a biological and agricultural engineer.
New biofuels technology developed by this diverse set of North
Carolina State University engineers has the potential to turn virtually
any fat source – vegetable oils, oils from animal fat and even oils
from algae – into fuel to power jet airplanes. The technology –
called Centia™ also can be used to make additives for cold-weather
biodiesel fuels and holds the potential to fuel automobiles that
currently run on gasoline. Read
the article >>
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News and Notes
The Facts
About Your Access to Compounded Medications
In the news and professional journals, you're about as likely to
read urban myths as you are the truth about your right to use compounded
preparations. Most articles that purport to be giving “expert” advice
will steer you wrong because they rely on “guidance” from the FDA
that does not have the force of law. And, as recently
as August 2006, a Federal Court struck down the key provisions of
this "guidance!”
In this court
decision, Medical Center vs Gonzales, the judge ruled that compounding
custom prescriptions from bulk ingredients based on a prescription
is legal and not under the jurisdiction of the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA). (The FDA had argued that compounded medications are "new
unapproved drugs" and that the agency should therefore have
jurisdiction over compounding pharmacies.)
In his opinion, the judge wrote that "compound drugs are
implicitly exempt from the new drug definitions contained in"
FDA regulations and that the FDA had overstepped its authority
by attempting to inspect the records of pharmacists who operate
legally according to their state regulations. Of the FDA argument
that it should regulate compounding pharmacists, Junell wrote “If
compounded drugs were required to undergo the new drug approval
process, the result would be that patients needing individually
tailored prescriptions would not be able to receive the necessary
medication due to the cost and time associated with obtaining approval.
It is in the best interest of public health to recognize an exemption
for compounded drugs that are created based on a prescription written
for an individual patient by a licensed practitioner.”
For accurate information about compounding, visit www.compoundingfacts.org,
a Web site dedicated to correcting misinformation like this about
the practice of pharmacy compounding.
What's your Story?
Do you have an interesting story about the use of compounded medications
in your practice? If you do, let us know! If we publish your story
in an upcoming edition of this newsletter, we'll donate $100 in
your name to any equine-related non-profit program you designate.
If you'd like to submit or discuss a story, please send an E-mail
to hflitcraft@WedgewoodPharmacy.com.
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This newsletter is published every month by Wedgewood Pharmacy,
one of the nation's largest veterinary compounding pharmacies.
405 Heron Drive Suite 200
Swedesboro, NJ 08085-1749
1-888-678-1967
Copyright © 2007 Wedgewood Village Pharmacy,
Inc. All rights reserved.
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Upcoming Events
Petfood
Forum 2007, April 16 – 18, Hyatt Regency O'Hare
CVC
East, April 27 – 30, Baltimore Convention Center
The
American Board of Veterinary Practitioners Annual Symposium,
April 27 – 29, Hilton Long Beach
American
College of Laboratory Animal Medicine annual forum, May 6 –
9, Loews Ventana Canyon Resort in Tucson , AZ
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Featured
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Featured
Drug Monograph
Pimobendan for Veterinary Use
Pimobendan is a relatively new and unique inodilator (inotropic,
mixed vasodilator). Its positive inotropic actions are caused by
both inhibition of phosphodiesterase III and increased sensitization
of myocardial contractile proteins to calcium. Digoxin and other
inotropic drugs increase cardiac contractility by actually increasing
the amount of intracellular calcium. Pimobendan improves systolic
efficiency without the negative pathway of increasing intracellular
calcium. Read
the entire monograph. >>
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