| Literature DB >> 20156368 |
Fatma Karapinar-Carkit1, Sander D Borgsteede, Jan Zoer, Carl Siegert, Maurits van Tulder, Antoine C G Egberts, Patricia M L A van den Bemt.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medication errors occur frequently at points of transition in care. The key problems causing these medication errors are: incomplete and inappropriate medication reconciliation at hospital discharge (partly arising from inadequate medication reconciliation at admission), insufficient patient information (especially within a multicultural patient population) and insufficient communication to the next health care provider. Whether interventions aimed at the combination of these aspects indeed result in less discontinuity and associated harm is uncertain. Therefore the main objective of this study is to determine the effect of the COACH program (Continuity Of Appropriate pharmacotherapy, patient Counselling and information transfer in Healthcare) on readmission rates in patients discharged from the internal medicine department. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20156368 PMCID: PMC2843699 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-10-39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Figure 1Study flow of the COACH program. t = 0,1,3,6; at hospital discharge, one month, three months, six months after hospital discharge. GP = general practitioner. CP = community pharmacist.
Figure 2Implementation of the COACH program. MR = medication reconciliation. PC = patient counselling following the steps for medication reconciliation. DRPs = drug related problems.
Protocols used for the steps shown in figure 2.
| Steps | Protocols used consists of |
|---|---|
| 1 | Questions asked: allergies, presence of relative during patient counselling at discharge, marital status, birth country patient and parents, education, readmission rate previous six months |
| 2 | Check: |
| 3 | Check: |
| 4 | Check: |
| 5 | Check: |
| 7 | Check: |
| 8 | Check: |
| 9 | Check: |
| 11 | Register on the medication discharge overview: changes in medication and reasons, possible drug-related problems and follow-up procedures (e.g. therapeutic drug monitoring). This information is automatically registered on the medication summary for the patient also. |
ACS = Acute coronary syndrome
Figure 3Medication summary for the patient (reverse side). The medication summary is folded to a A6-format.
Figure 4Medication summary for the patient (front side). The administration scheme is filled in with the help of the patient. In bold text the reasons for changes in the pharmacotherapy, drug related problems and follow-up actions can be specified.
Figure 5Discharge medication overview for community pharmacist and general practitioner. In the remarks section reasons for changes in the pharmacotherapy, drug-related problems and follow-up actions can be specified. This overview is faxed to the community pharmacist. If Vitamin K antagonists are prescribed the text "Please inform anticoagulation clinic" is printed to request the community pharmacy to inform the anticoagulation clinic about the final discharge prescriptions. The information in the red blocks is mailed to the general practitioner.