| Literature DB >> 26966056 |
Justin P Turner1, Susan Edwards2, Melinda Stanners3, Sepehr Shakib4, J Simon Bell5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Polypharmacy and multimorbidity are common in long-term care facilities (LTCFs). Reducing polypharmacy may reduce adverse events and maintain quality of life. Deprescribing refers to reducing medications after consideration of therapeutic goals, benefits and risks, and medical ethics. The objective was to use nominal group technique (NGT) to generate then rank factors that general medical practitioners (GPs), nurses, pharmacists and residents or their representatives perceive are most important when deciding whether or not to deprescribe medications.Entities:
Keywords: GERIATRIC MEDICINE; PRIMARY CARE
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26966056 PMCID: PMC4800122 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-009781
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Flow diagram for phase 1 and phase 2. GP, general medical practitioner.
Figure 2Process of nominal group technique (NGT).
Demographics of nominal group participants
| Group | n | Male:female | Age median (range) | Years of experience |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | ||||
| Residents/representatives | 6 | 3:3 | 80–89 (70–79 to 90+) | 3.0 (1–14) |
| GPs | 13 | 9:4 | 50–59 (20–29 to 60–69) | 27.0 (5–44) |
| Nurses | 6 | 2:4 | 30–39 (20–29 to 60–69) | 9.0 (1–30) |
| Pharmacists | 9 | 5:4 | 40–49 (30–39 to 60–69) | 23.0 (8–42) |
| Phase 2 | ||||
| Residents/representatives | 5 | 1:4 | 60–69 (40–49 to 60–69) | No answers given |
| GPs | 6 | 2:4 | 40–49 (30–39 to 60–69) | 15.5 (8–28) |
| Nurses | 6 | 0:6 | 50–59 (20–29 to 60–69) | 23.5 (3–39) |
| Pharmacists | 5 | 2:3 | 50–59 (30–39 to 60–69) | 28 (13–33) |
| Overall | ||||
| Residents/representatives | 11 | 4:7 | 70–79 (40–49 to 90+) | 3.0 (1–14) |
| GPs | 19 | 11:8 | 50–59 (20–29 to 60–69) | 26.5 (5–39) |
| Nurses | 12 | 2:10 | 50–59 (20–29 to 60–69) | 13.5 (1–39) |
| Pharmacists | 14 | 7:7 | 50–59 (30–39 to 60–69) | 28.0 (8–42) |
Years of experience=number of years since initial registration as a health professional, or the number of years residents had been living in a LTCF.
GPs, general medical practitioners; LTCFs, long-term care facilities.
Top seven factors generated per group
| Group | Ranking |
|---|---|
| Residents | |
| Well-being of the resident | 1 |
| Continuity of nursing staff | 2 |
| Feeling of wellness due to medication | 3 |
| Burden of medication administration | 4 |
| Residents have the right to question their GP | 4 |
| Voice of the resident is not heard | 6 |
| Respect the GP and do as I am told | 6 |
| GPs | |
| Evidence for deprescribing | 1 |
| Communication with resident/family | 2 |
| GP funding | 3 |
| Health system structure | 3 |
| Adequacy of medical and medication history | 5 |
| Fear of deterioration | 5 |
| Residents willingness to deprescribe | 7 |
| Nurses | |
| GP receptivity | 1 |
| Nurses ability to advocate for residents | 2 |
| Regular review of medical conditions | 3 |
| Understanding of medications by nurse, family and resident | 4 |
| Nurses understanding of the residents medical conditions | 5 |
| Family—support, beliefs and conflicts | 6 |
| Communication between nurses | 6 |
| Health literacy of resident and family | 6 |
| Pharmacists | |
| Clinical appropriateness of prescribed therapy | 1 |
| Resident's goals of care | 2 |
| Opportunity and funding for pharmacist follow-up monitoring | 3 |
| Resident's frailty status and other medical conditions | 4 |
| Presence of ADEs | 4 |
| Attitudes of prescribers | 6 |
| Burden of medication administration | 7 |
| Multidisciplinary—regional | |
| Resident's goals of care | 1 |
| Well-being of the resident | 2 |
| Health system structure | 3 |
| Clinical appropriateness of prescribed therapy | 4 |
| Evidence for deprescribing | 5 |
| Resident's frailty status and other medical conditions | 5 |
| Regular review of medical conditions | 7 |
| Multidisciplinary—metropolitan | |
| Adequacy of medical and medication history | 1 |
| Health system structure | 2 |
| Evidence for deprescribing | 3 |
| Communication with resident/family | 4 |
| GP receptivity | 5 |
| Continuity of nursing staff | 6 |
| Resident's goals of care | 6 |
| Understanding of medications by nurse, family and resident | 6 |
Some factors received equal scores and are therefore ranked the same importance.
ADEs, adverse drug events; GP, general medical practitioner.