| Literature DB >> 26198433 |
Olaf Rose1,2, Corinna Schaffert3, Kathrin Czarnecki4, Hugo S Mennemann5, Isabel Waltering6, Stefanie Hamacher7, Moritz Felsch8, Lena Herich9, Juliane Köberlein10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pharmaceutical practice worldwide is developing towards patient care. Medication Review (MR) and Medication Therapy Management (MTM) are evolving as the most prominent services in pharmaceutical care and have a strong potential to provide a large benefit for patients and society. MTMs can only be performed in an interprofessional, collaborative setting. Several international studies have explored the effects of a MTM on the quality of therapy and costs. For Germany the data is still deficient. This study aims to provide data on the effects of an interprofessional MTM regarding quality of therapy, quality of life, costs and cost-effectiveness. METHOD/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26198433 PMCID: PMC4508809 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-015-0305-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Fig. 1Design of the WestGem-study. This figure shows design and timeframe of the WestGem-study
Components of the intervention and training strategy for its implementation. This table summarizes the components of the intervention and planned training strategies
| Components of intervention and implementation | Content | Participants | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| I. Transfer of medical patient data | Information concerning diagnosis, patient’s medication, quality of life, mobility, risk of failing, allergies | GP |
| II. Assessment at patients site | Brown bag review and collection of information concerning side effects, adherence, social support and else | Home-care specialist, patient | |
| III. Anonymised data transfer to pharmacist | Assessment data | Home-care specialist | |
| IV. Medication review and SOAP note | Assessment of pharmacotherapy, generation of a new medication plan, suggestions for monitoring and patient counseling | 2 Pharmacists per patient (one pharmacist generates a first draft of the SOAP note, second one reviews suggested plan) | |
| V. Transfer of the SOAP note to home-care specialist | SOAP note and advices addressing home-care specialist tasks | Pharmacist | |
| VI. Information of GP | SOAP note with new medication plan, home-care specialist’s note for the GP (concerning for example home-care devices) | Home-care specialist | |
|
| I. Kick-off meetings | Information concerning organizational aspects, process’s time frame, controlling tools, assessment instruments | Home-care specialists, pharmacists, GPs and moderators |
| II. profession-specific trainings | Training in medication therapy management, medication review and SOAP-writing | Home-care specialists, pharmacists, and moderators | |
| Training in case management | |||
| III. training in patient assessment | Assessment instruments, case studies | GPs and moderators | |
| IV. Process controlling | Ongoing feedbacks on process performance (e.g. accepted interventions, time frame) | All participants | |
Fig. 2CONSORT flowchart of recruitment of practices and patients (projected). This figure illustrates the projected recruitment flowchart of the WestGem-study
Outcome parameters and instruments. This table displays the outcome parameter of the study as well as instruments
| Outcome parameter | Instrument | Data source |
|---|---|---|
| Primary outcome | ||
| Quality of medication therapy | Medication Appropriateness Index (MAI) | PHARM |
| Secondary outcomes | ||
| Sociodemographic data | Items from German standard questionnaire [ | CRF, TI |
| Laboratory data | Patient chart | CRF |
| Diagnosis | Patient chart (ICD-10) | CRF |
| Allergies | Patient chart | CRF |
| Comorbidities | Cumulative Illness Rating Scale Geriatric Version (CIRS) [ | CRF |
| Reported side effects | Self-developed item | CRF, TI |
| Quality of Life | EuroQol (EQ-5D) [ | PQ, TI |
| Depression | Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ9) [ | PQ |
| Activities of daily living | ADL, iADL [ | TI |
| Risk of falling | Tinetti-Test [ | CRF |
| Mobility | FFB-Mot [ | TI |
| Cognitive status | Adopted Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) | CRF |
| Pain | German Chronic Pain Scale [ | PQ, TI |
| Self-rated health | Self-developed item | PQ |
| Vision and hearing | Self-developed item | TI |
| Health behavior (smoking, drinking) | Self-developed item | PQ, TI |
| Social participation | F-SOZU K14 [ | TI |
| Prescribed medication | Patient chart | CRF |
| Brown bag medication | Self-developed assessment instrument | HCS |
| Healthcare utilization and costs | Data from inpatient and outpatient care, rehabilitation, medical devices, etc. | CRF |
| Complexity of medication | Medication regimen complexity index (MRCI) [ | PHARM |
| Adherence | MARS, MORISKY [ | TI |
| Drug-related Problems | Classification according PCNE version 6.2 | PHARM |
| Inadequate medication | Potentially inadequate medication (German PRISCUS-list) [ | PHARM |
| Patients goals of therapy | Self-developed assessment instrument | HCS |
| Difficulties in medication handling | Self-developed assessment instrument | HCS |
| Nutrition | Self-developed assessment instrument | HCS |
| Dizziness | Self-developed assessment instrument | HCS |
| Mortality | Patient chart | CRF |
| Accepted medication proposals | Self-developed item | CRF |
| Additional parameters | ||
| Barriers of concept implementation | Qualitative research approach | TI, FG |
| Practice characteristics | Self-developed questionnaire [ | TI, on-site monitoring |
PHARM pharmacists, HCS home-care specialist, PQ patient questionnaire, CRF case report form, TI telephone interview, FG focus groups