| Literature DB >> 21496345 |
Louise Forsetlund1, Morten C Eike, Elisabeth Gjerberg, Gunn E Vist.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Studies have shown that residents in nursing homes often are exposed to inappropriate medication. Particular concern has been raised about the consumption of psychoactive drugs, which are commonly prescribed for nursing home residents suffering from dementia. This review is an update of a Norwegian systematic review commissioned by the Norwegian Directorate of Health. The purpose of the review was to identify and summarise the effect of interventions aimed at reducing potentially inappropriate use or prescribing of drugs in nursing homes.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21496345 PMCID: PMC3108292 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2318-11-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Figure 1Flow chart of study selection.
Description of included primary studies for the comparison educational outreach versus usual practice
| Study | Participants | Intervention | Comparison | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physicians, nurses and nursing assistants in 6 nursing homes with 431 residents in the experiment group and 6 nursing homes with 392 residents in the control group in the US. | Aimed to reduce the excessive use of sedating drugs. Three interactive educational outreach visits by a pharmacist to nursing home physicians to reduce the use of psychoactive drugs. Only physicians that exceeded a treshold value for psychoactive drug prescribing at the baseline evaluation were targeted. Six literature summaries done by research team on e.g. management of insomnia, confusion and agitation were disseminated to all physicians in three mailings and used as discussion aids in the educational visit. Four training sessions were held for nurses and nursing assistants in separate groups on patient care, alternatives to psychoactive drugs and adverse effects. | Usual care. | Score for use of psychoactive drugs, proportion of residents using antipsychotics. | |
| 61 physicians, nurses and nursing assistants in 10 nursing homes with 381 residents in the experiment group and 37 physicians with other health personnel in 10 nursing homes with 334 residents in the control group. | Aimed at implementing evidence based practice in residential care. Doctors received two 30 minute educational outreach visits by a pharmacist in their offices. The risks of psychotropic drug use was one of several other key messages, combined with detailed audit information on fall rates, psychotropic prescribing patterns and stroke risk reduction practices in the nursing home of each physician. A link nurse was appointed at each facility. The link nurses were trained in four two hour sessions in which medication management was one of the topics. Also, a pharmacist visited each nursing home and spoke to staff about reducing the use of psychotropic medication. | Usual care | Percentage of residents prescribed and administered any psychotropic medication, percentage of residents who had a fall incident in a 3 month period. | |
Description of included primary studies for the comparison educational meetings and workshops versus usual care
| Study | Participants | Interventions | Comparison | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Health personnel in 6 nursing homes with 181 residents in the intervention group and 6 nursing homes with 168 residents in the control group | Aimed at reducing the prescribing of neuroleptics for residents with dementia. Ten month educational program delivered by a psychologist, occupational therapist or nurse with a focus on alternatives to drugs for managing agitated behaviour in dementia. The staff received training in providing person centered care and to develop skills through didactic instruction, skills training and weekly supervision and follow up both in groups and individually. The programme entailed a 'systemic consultation approach'. | Usual care. | Percentage of residents using neuroleptics, percentage of residents with at least one fall. | |
| Two nursing homes with 89 caregivers and 68 residents allocated to the intervention group and two nursing homes with 94 caregivers and 74 residents allocated to the control group, in Germany. | Aimed at increasing the caregivers' knowlegde and competencies for dealing adequately with residents with dementia and reducing the number of residents who were given sedative drugs and/or being physically restrained. A training program that consisted of five modules (13 one hour educational meetings in a 13 week intervention period) was developed using focus groups and review of international literature to find the key problem areas. The aim was to improve the interaction between caregivers and residents by improving caregivers knowledge and expertise in providing care to residents with dementia. Lectures were given by health care researchers with practical experience in nursing in small groups of max 12 participants. Didactic teaching methods were used for the theoretical introduction and problem based learning methods for practical learning and skills training. | Control 1: A group that was on the waiting list. Control 2: A group of health professionals who received relaxation. This comparison has not been included here. | Percentage of residents using sedative drugs, percentage of residents exposed to physical restraint. | |
| 39 nursing assistants in one unit in one nursing home with 49 residents in the intervention group and 49 nursing assistants in one unit in one nursing home with 56 residents in the control group in USA. | Aimed at improving the well being of nursing home residents with dementia by means of a communication skills program for nursing assistants. Education delivered by a master's level social worker with practical experience. Alternately group instruction in small groups five times à 45 minutes and individual conferences à 30 minutes four times (for skills training and feedback). The program addressed four areas: knowledge of dementia, verbal and nonverbal communication, memory aids and problem behaviours. | Usual care for the control group in the 6 months that the intervention lasted for the experimental group. Then, the control group also received the same intervention for 3 months and both groups were measured again at 9 months (we used data from the 6 month measurements). | Number of days the previous week that residents used psychotropic drugs, number of days the previous week that restraints were used. | |
| Health personnel and 76 residents aged 65 years and more taking non steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) regularly in 10 nursing homes in the intervention group and 71 residents taking NSAIDs regularly in 10 nursing homes in the control group in USA. | Aimed at reducing the use of NSAIDs in the management of osteoarthritis in nursing home residents. The educational programme focused on alternative approaches to NSAIDs to relieve muscle and joint pains in residents, e.g. use of acetaminophen. One meeting with both the administrative and professional management and a separate meeting with each nursing home study coordinator to review the purpose and educational materials during the initial phase of the project, a 30 minute structured teaching session for physicians and nursing staff. | Usual care | Use of NSAIDs and acetaminophen the past seven days. | |
| 197 care staff. Two nursing homes with 113 residents in the intervention group and two nursing homes with 98 residents in control. | Aimed at reducing agitation in residents with dementia, use of restraints and antipsychotic drugs. Relation Related Care education and training program, consisting of predisposing, enabling and reinforcing elements. Organized as a two day seminar and monthly group guidance for six months. | Usual practice. | Percentage of residents taking antipsychotic drugs, use of restraint. | |
Description of included primary studies for the comparison educational meetings and workshops with other co-interventions versus usual care
| Study | Participants | Interventions | Comparison | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nurses and physicians, 2156 residents in 12 nursing homes participated in the intervention group and 2061 residents in 12 nursing homes partcipated in the control group in USA and Canada. | Aimed at reducing the number of prescriptions for antimicrobials for suspected urinary tract infections. Multifaceted intervention: Diagnostic and treatment algorithm for urinary tract infections introduced to physicians and nurses, small group interactive sessions with case scenarios for nurses, videotapes, outreach visits to the physicians that cared for 80% or more of the residents, visits from the researchers every three months to address any questions, one nurse in each nursing home appointed to remind nurses to use the algorithm. | Usual care. | Number of amtimicrobial prescriptions for suspected urinary tract infection per 1000 resident days, total number of prescriptions for amtimicrobials per 1000 resident days, number of admissions to hospital, mortality. | |
| Health personnel and 575 residents in 6 nursing homes in the intervention group and 577 residents in 6 nursing homes in the control group in USA. | Aimed at reducing antipsychotic use in nursing homes with high use rates. Physicians, nurses, nursing assistants and other direct care staff were trained to use structured guidelines. Educational outreach: A geropsychiatrist visited all physicians who had five or more patients in the home to dicuss risks and benefits of antpsychotics and delivered printed material. Educational meetings: A trained nurse educator conducted five to six 1 hour inservice programs (including case examples, role playing and problem solving sessions) for staff over a 1 week period. Four weeks after the inservice programs were completed, a follow up session was conducted for the staff. Further consultations and meetings could be arranged if requested (it is not reported if it was). | Usual care and waiting list. | Use of antipsychotics as registered in the medication administration records. | |
| Nurses, 905 residents in 13 nursing homes in the intervention group and 2325 residents in 39 nursing homes in Australia. | Aimed at changing drug use, mortality and morbidity. 12 months intervention involving three phases: introducing a new professional role to stakeholders with relationship building, nurse education and medication review by pharmacists. In focus groups, written and telephone communication and face to face professional contact between nursing home staff and clinical pharmacist drug policies and resident problems were dicussed. 6-9 problem based education sessions (11 hours total) were held for nurses. The subjects were geriatric pharmacology, depression and dementia, incontinence, falls, insomnia, constipation, and pain supported by wall charts, bulletins, telephone calls and visits by clinical pharmacists (average contacts per nursing home was 26 h). For 500 selected residents clinical pharmacists wrote down the results of their review of medication, which was then discussed with the nurses and included in each patient's record and thus made available to the residents' physician. | Usual care. | Percentage of residents being administered psychotropic medication, mortality, number of hospitalisations. | |
Description of included primary studies for the comparison medical review by pharmacist versus usual care
| Study | Participants | Intervention | Comparison | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physicians, registered nurses, 56 residents in the intervention group and 54 residents in the control group that were assigned to 85 long term care facilities in Australia. | Aimed at improving medication management services by transferring information on medications to care providers in the longterm care facilities. The transition pharmacist compiled a medication transfer summary and faxed this to the family physician and the community pharmacist. The pharmacist coordinated an evidence based medication review that was to be performed by the community pharmacist contracted to the facility within 14 days of the transfer. After this, the transition pharmacist also arranged and participated in a case conference with the family physician, the community pharmacist and a registered nurse at the facility within a month of the transfer. | Usual care: Standard hospital discharge summary. | Medication Appropriateness Index score, falls, hospital admissions (emergency visits and readmissions). | |
| General practitioners, geriatricians, pharmacists, residential care staff, 50 residents in 5 nursing homes in the intervention group and 50 residents in 5 nursing homes in control group 1 and 54 residents in control group 2 (not included here) in Australia. | Aimed at improving appropriateness of medications. Two multidisciplinary case conferences (GP, geriatrician, pharmacist, residential care staff, representative of the Alzheimer's Association of South Australia) were conducted 6-12 weeks apart. A medical review was prepared beforehand by the resident's GP. | Usual care. Both groups received a half day education in how to handle behaviour problems in residents with dementia. | MAI (Medication Appropriateness Index) score, number of drugs. | |
| 158 residents in 7 nursing homes in the intervention group and 172 residents in 7 nursing homes in the control group in United Kingdom. | Aimed at reducing the number of prescribed drugs. The pharmacist collected details of current medication for each resident from the Medicines Administration Record chart in each home, compiled a brief medical history and made the staff identify any current problems. The pharmacist checked whether the use of neuroleptics were in accordance with the US Ombudsman Reconciliation Act guidelines and made suggestions for change of medication if necessary. Three weeks afterwards, the homes were revisited to identify any immediate problems and to check on whether changes had been implemented. | Usual care. | Mean number of prescribed drugs. | |
| 41 residents with epilepsy in the intervention group and 33 residents in the control group; 51 residents with Parkinson in the intervention group and 33 residents in the control group in 48 nursing homes in Sweden. | Aimed at improving the pharmacological treatment. Pharmacists reviewed and documented the patients' drug use and any problems related to the drug use as reported by the residents, their contact person at the nursing home and the resident's physician. A multidisciplinary team consisting of the data collecting pharmacist, a pharmacist with a special experience in neurology, a primary care physician, neurologist, neuropsychiatrist and a clinical pharmacologist discussed the collected information and made suggestions. A list of recommended changes in medication was sent to the resident's physician. | Usual care. | Number of drugs. | |
| 11 nursing homes with 173 residents in intervention group and 11 nursing homes with 161 residents in control group. | Aimed at reducing inappropriate prescription of psychoactive medications and falls. Specially trained study pharmacists visited nursing homes monthly for 12 months. Information for each resident was collected from the nursing home record, the GP and from the local community pharmacist if needed. The residents themselves, their nurses and next of kin were interviewed to assess residents' need for medication. An algorithm were used by pharmacists for guidance in assessing the inappropriateness of psychoactive medication. Recommendations were discussed with nursing staff. Meetings were held with the residents' GP to discuss and decide about medication and feedback were given to nursing staff. | Usual care. | Proportion of residents prescribed one or more inappropriate psychoactive (anxiolytic, hypnotic or antipsychotic) drugs, change in number of inappropriate psychoactive drugs, rate of falls per 100 resident months. | |
| 626 residents in 15 nursing homes in the intervention group and 1128 residents in 18 nursing homes in the control group in Sweden. | Aimed at minimising the use of nonrecommended drugs as defined by guidelines from the Swedish Medical Product Agency. One pharmacist was appointed from the local pharmacy to spend one day per month in a nursing home. The pharmacist attended two training sessions in geriatrics, drug use and in interdisciplinary collaboration methods before the intervention and three sessions during the 12 months intervention. The appointed pharmacists helped in organising monthly multidisciplinary meetings to discuss and improve the use of drugs that could cause confusion and memory impairment. A physician, pharmacist and selected nurses and nursing assistants participated in discussing each resident's drug use. The length of the meetings was locally adapted. Pharmacists formed regional networks to support their function in the project. | Usual care. | Number of prescriptions for any psychotropic, antipsychotics, hypnotics, anxiolytics, antidepressants. | |
| 661 residents on one or more drugs selected from 65 nursing homes in United Kingdom: 331 allocated to the intervention group and 330 to the control group. | Medical review by a pharmacist by using the patient's clinical record and by consultation with the patient and carer. On this basis, the pharmacist made recommendations and forwarded them on a written proforma to the GP for acceptance and implementation. The GPs indicated acceptance by ticking a box on the proforma. | Usual care. | Number of changes in medication per resident, total number of drugs used. | |
Description of included primary studies for the comparison geriatric assessment team versus usual care
| Study | Participants | Intervention | Comparison | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 33 residents assigned to the intervention group and 36 residents to the control group in the same nursing home. | Aimed at identifying potential healthcare outcomes, e.g. reduction of prescription of drugs. A Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment Team: Team of geriatricians and geriatric nurse practitioners. The team evaluated each residents on arrival to the nursing home and was responsible for all medical treatment during the study period. | Usual care: residents managed by individual physicians without formal training in geriatrics. | Number of drugs prescribed, hospital admissions/use of health care services. |
Description of included primary studies for the comparison early psychiatric intervention versus usual care
| Study | Participants | Intervention | Comparison | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 53 residents in the intervention group and 53 residents in the control group in 22 nursing homes in Australia. | Aimed at improving mental health and physical outcomes by early detection of symptoms, thereby indirectly reducing the need for psychotropic medication. Psychiatric assessment of all residents in the intervention group. Residents attaining a GDS-15 (Geriatric Depression Scale) score greater than 5 or a NPI (Neuropsychiatric Inventory) score greater than zero in any of its 12 sections were referred to a psychogeriatric multi disciplinary team for treatment and systematic follow up untill the problem was solved (usually ca 3 months). | Usual care, i.e. when residents screened positively, they were not automatically referred to psychiatric treatment but only if it was judged necessary. | Use of psychotropic agents or use of PRN medication, physical restraint. |
Description of included primary studies for the comparison activity program versus usual care
| Study | Participants | Interventions | Comparison | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 42 residents in the intervention group and 39 residents in the control group in a 250 beds nursing home in USA. | Aimed at reducing behaviour disorders in residents with dementia. Program with three components: | Usual care, i.e. each resident had about 3 to 6 activity hours each week: discussion group, arts and crafts, special programs with outside entertainers and bedside sensory stimulation. The physician could make contact with the psychiatrist if needed. Usual care was modified by the intervention: when intervention residents participated in acitivites elsewhere, the nurse to resident ratio increased in the nursing unit. | Number of residents using antipsychotics, number of drugs, use of physical restraint. |