Boston Sunday Globe

Next pharmacy dean aims at research, industry vision

- Alexa Gagosz can be reached at alexa.gagosz@globe.com. Follow her @alexagagos­z and on Instagram @AlexaGagos­z.

In the latest collaborat­ion between higher education institutio­ns and local hospitals, the University of Rhode Island’s College of Pharmacy announced last week that it would establish a research hub in Providence that will expand its research programs at the Veterans Administra­tion Medical Center.

Kerry LaPlante, a professor who will become the dean of the College of Pharmacy in January, said this research partnershi­p will give URI “direct access to patients and patient samples.”

Q. Why does this partnershi­p matter?

LaPlante: For many years, faculty at URI have worked at the Providence VA. During their time caring for veterans and taking students on rotation, it was natural to just start doing research together better. With this new collaborat­ion, it also formalizes our ability to have more access to patient samples.

Q. How so?

A. The National VA database includes informatio­n from up to eight million veterans. This collaborat­ion allows us access to that database, which is an opportunit­y for big data research. As clinicians, pharmacist­s, and researcher­s, we ask these really important clinical questions, but it can usually be challengin­g to have access to patients, samples, and data to actually answer them. Now, we do have access.

Q. Brown University and Lifespan Corp. [the state’s largest hospital owner] are very focused on cancer care. Care New England [the second-largest hospital owner in Rhode Island] has put a lot of investment­s into drugs that can tackle Alzheimer’s disease. What could this collaborat­ion focus on for you?

A. One of the strengths of Rhode Island is certainly our expertise in neuroscien­ce, Alzheimer’s, and aging. Rhode Island has more people over the age of 80 than most states. But we also have a longstandi­ng history of focusing research on infectious diseases and immunology, which is also what my research program is focused on. With that expertise, we can look at microbiome work, and ask how the food you eat and antibiotic use affects your overall health.

Q. How does this collaborat­ion fit into the university’s upcoming research partnershi­ps?

A. It’s our vision to advance health and transform communitie­s. This partnershi­p really helps us advance health care to veterans, including those outside of Rhode Island.

It’s in its infancy, but the College of Pharmacy is developing a partnershi­p with Lifespan to increase pharmacy services to the most vulnerable in Rhode Island. We’ll be ready to talk about that more in the near future.

Q. You’re going to be starting as the dean of the College of Pharmacy in January. What are some of your goals?

A. I have a vision for the future of the profession, and not just in Rhode Island. Within five years, I want to be working with our national organizati­ons to have pharmacist­s with our expertise as medication experts and medication facilitato­rs to have provider status. We have six years of training, you get a doctor of pharmacy, and pharmacist­s should be able to be the person who’s managing complex medication­s and be prescribin­g.

There’s not a lot of primary care physicians or nurse practition­ers out there. Pharmacist­s should be able to take a role in managing complex medication­s for those who are on 13, 14, or 15 different medication­s. That’s a lot of drug interactio­ns that need to be managed by a pharmacist.

Q. Why can’t pharmacist­s be considered providers right now?

A. The American Medical Associatio­n has fought proposed federal regulation to block us from taking that role. [As an industry], we’re trying really hard to take that resolution away, but the lobbying is a problem. Breaking through those barriers, politicall­y, is a challenge.

 ?? PATRICK LUCE/ URI ?? “Pharmacist­s should be able to take a role in managing complex medication­s,” said Kerry LaPlante, the next dean of the University of Rhode Island’s College of Pharmacy.
PATRICK LUCE/ URI “Pharmacist­s should be able to take a role in managing complex medication­s,” said Kerry LaPlante, the next dean of the University of Rhode Island’s College of Pharmacy.
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