Friday, March 27, 2026

A rural Ohio pharmacy school embraces pharmacists' expanded 'provider status' by deploying a mobile care unit

Mobile Health Clinics staffed by student pharmacists and 
supervising faculty provided health care in rural Ohio.
Dozens of states across the U.S. allow pharmacists to have expanded care status similar to the role a primary care medical professional would fill. In 2019, the Ohio legislature granted pharmacists "provider status," which means they are "recognized healthcare providers in the state insurance code and allowed to be reimbursed for services like chronic disease management and immunizations."

Using their change to "provider status" as a launching pad, leadership at Ohio Northern University's Raabe College of Pharmacy in rural Hardin County, Ohio, challenged themselves to reenvisioned how they could use their existing "HealthWise" service, which was originally intended for ONU employees, to address health care deficiencies throughout rural Hardin County and its rural county neighbors, reports Kay Miller Temple for Rural Health Information Hub.

During a Hardin County health needs planning meeting, Michael Rush, PharmD, who teaches residents and is the director of operations at ONU HealthWise, was inspired by a food truck he saw outside; he thought a mobile HealthWise might be the answer.
Location of ONU in Ohio

Once shared, Rush's idea gained traction, and numerous funding awards and grants led to Raabe College hiring a pharmacist and purchasing a bus, which "built out ONU HealthWise into the ONU HealthWise Mobile Health Clinic," Temple writes.

Today, ONU student pharmacists and their supervising faculty aboard the HealthWise Mobile unit provide a broad spectrum of health care, including "preventive health education, medication reconciliation, medication therapy management, and chronic disease state management," Temple reports. Health screenings, immunizations and specialty care are also addressed on-site.

The Healthwise Mobile unit services have continued to expand to meet their community's needs. When two rural pharmacies closed in 2024, the traveling care team filled the gaps. 

Michelle Musser, director of ONU's Rural and Underserved Health Scholars Program, told Temple, "The students need those experiences of working in a pharmacy, different from the mobile outreach experiences. This closure allowed them to experience firsthand what a rural pharmacy closure actually does to rural communities."

Building on the first Healthwise Mobile Clinic's success, Raabe College is investing in a second van. Temple adds, "HealthWise will eventually be present in Hardin, Allen, Auglaize, Hancock, and Wyandot Counties."

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