| Literature DB >> 16336646 |
Simon Bell1, Andrew J McLachlan, Parisa Aslani, Paula Whitehead, Timothy F Chen.
Abstract
The objective of this systematic review was to evaluate the impact of pharmacist delivered community-based services to optimise the use of medications for mental illness. Twenty-two controlled (randomised and non-randomised) studies of pharmacists' interventions in community and residential aged care settings identified in international scientific literature were included for review. Papers were assessed for study design, service recipient, country of origin, intervention type, number of participating pharmacists, methodological quality and outcome measurement. Three studies showed that pharmacists' medication counselling and treatment monitoring can improve adherence to antidepressant medications among those commencing treatment when calculated using an intention-to-treat analysis. Four trials demonstrated that pharmacist conducted medication reviews may reduce the number of potentially inappropriate medications prescribed to those at high risk of medication misadventure. The results of this review provide some evidence that pharmacists can contribute to optimising the use of medications for mental illness in the community setting. However, more well designed studies are needed to assess the impact of pharmacists as members of community mental health teams and as providers of comprehensive medicines information to people with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.Entities:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16336646 PMCID: PMC1345690 DOI: 10.1186/1743-8462-2-29
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aust New Zealand Health Policy ISSN: 1743-8462
Figure 1Literature search strategy and review procedure.
Services provided to consumers
| Brook et al, (2003) | NL | RCT | CP | PE | 19 | 64 Int 71 Cont | Attitudes to AD | Improved attitudes |
| Brook et al, (2003) | NL | RCT | CP | PE | 19 | 64 Int 71 Cont | Depressive symptoms | Improvements in depressive symptoms |
| Brook et al, (2005) | NL | RCT | CP | PE | 19 | 64 Int 71 Cont | AD adherence, depressive symptoms | Improved adherence among those that |
| Finley et al, (2002) | USA | CT | HMO | PE/TM | 2 | 91 Int 129 Cont | AD adherence, resource utilisation, | Improved adherence, higher medication switch rates, |
| Finely et al, (2003) | USA | RCT | HMO | PE/TM | 2 | 75 Int 50 Cont | AD adherence, resource utilisation, | Improved adherence, |
| Capoccia et al, (2004) | USA | RCT | PCM | PE/TM | 2 | 41 Int 33 Cont | AD adherence, resource utilisation, | |
| Adler et al, (2004) | USA | RCT | PCM | PE/TM | 5 | 268 Int 265 Cont | AD use rates, | Improved AD use rate. |
| Rosen et al, (1978) | USA | CT | CMH | PE/TM | 1 | 30 Int 152 Cont | Patient well-being, | Intervention patients' had higher personal |
| Razali et al, (1995) | Malaysia | RCT | OP | PE | 1 | 85 Int 80 Cont | Relapses requiring | Fewer relapses requiring hospitalisation |
| Shaw et al, (2000) | UK | RCT | OP | PE/CA | 1 | 51 Int 46 Cont | Medication knowledge, |
RCT = randomised controlled trial; CT = controlled trial; CP = community pharmacy; HMO = health maintenance organisation; PCM = primary care medical centre; CMH = community mental health centre; OP = outpatients' clinic; NL= The Netherlands; PE = patient education; TM = treatment monitoring; ca = care planning; Ph = pharmacists; Int = intervention group; Cont = control group; AD = antidepressant medication.
Services provided to other health professionals
| Williams et al, (2004) | USA | RCT | GP | MR | 1 | 63 Int 77 Cont | Physical, cognitive and affective functioning, health status, number and cost of medications. | Decrease in number and cost of medications |
| Schmidt et al, (1998) | Sweden | CRCT | RAC | MR | 15 | 626 Int 1228 Cont | Incidence and quality of psychotropic medication use. | Increase in psychotropic medication use and therapeutic duplication in control group. Decrease in antipsychotic and hypnotic use in intervention group, decrease in AD use in intervention and control groups |
| Schmidt et al, (2000) | Sweden | CRCT | RAC | MR | 15 | 1549 Total † | Quality of medication use (three-year follow-up). | Previous Improvements in quality of medication use sustained for specific indicators |
| Coleman et al, (1999) | USA | CRCT | HMO | MR | 1 | 96 Int 73 Cont | Depressive symptoms, physical function, service utilisation, number of high risk medications, satisfaction, urinary incontinence, falls, cost. | Decrease in urinary incontinence in intervention group at 12 months. No differences between intervention and control groups at 24 months |
| Roberts et al, (2001) | Australia | CRCT | RAC | MR | ND | 905 Int 2325 Cont | Medication use, medication cost, mortality, morbidity and resource utilisation. | Decrease in psycholeptic and benzodiazepine drug administration, decrease medication cost |
| Furniss et al, (2000) | UK | CRCT | RAC | MR | 1 | 158 Int 172 Cont | Prescribing patterns, mortality, mental state, depressive symptoms, and behavioural disturbance | Decrease in mortality, decrease in number of prescribed medications, increase in behavioural disturbance |
| Burns et al, (2000) | UK | CRCT | RAC | MR | 1 | 158 Int 177 Cont | Medication costs. | Decrease in medication cost |
| van Eijk et al, (2001) | NL | CRCT | GP | ED | 37‡ | 70 Int 1* 52 Int 2* 68 Cont* | Prescribing of highly anticholinergic and less anticholinergic AD medications | Decrease in high anticholinergic AD use in intervention group 2. Increase in less anticholinergic AD use in Intervention group 1 |
| Hartlaub et al, (1993) | USA | CT | PPGP | ED | ND | 28 Int 1* 26 Int 2* 37 Cont * | Benzodiazepine prescribing pattern | |
| de Burgh et al, (1995) | Australia | RCT | GP | ED | 1 | 142 Int * 144 Cont * | Benzodiazepine prescribing pattern | Overall decline in benzodiazepine use. Differences between intervention and control groups not significant |
| Crotty et al, (2004) | Australia | CRCT | RAC | ED | 1 | 381 Int 334 Cont | Fall rate, psychotropic medication use, BP, quality of life | Increase in 'as required' antipsychotic medication use in the intervention group |
| Avorn et al, (1992) | USA | CRCT | RAC | ED | 1 | 431 Int 392 Cont | Psychotropic mediation use, mental status, memory, anxiety, depressive symptoms, behaviour, sleep | Decrease in psychotropic medication use, decrease in inappropriateness of drug use, less cognitive decline, increase in depression scores. |
CT = controlled trial; RCT = randomised controlled trial; CRCT = cluster randomised controlled trial; GP = general practice; RAC = residential aged care; PPGP = prepaid group practice; HMO = health maintenance organisation; USA = United States of America; NL = The Netherlands; MR = medication review; ED = prescribing education initiative; ND = not described in paper; Int = intervention group; Cont = control group; AD = antidepressant medication.
† Journal article reported overall number of patients (n = 1549) divided between 16 intervention and 18 control residential aged care facilities.
‡ Pharmacists participated in group discussions with physicians, discussions were led by a medical researcher.
* Reported sample size based on number of physicians that received pharmacists' educational intervention.