| Literature DB >> 27852287 |
Cathal A Cadogan1, Cristín Ryan1, Jill J Francis2, Gerard J Gormley3, Peter Passmore4, Ngaire Kerse5, Carmel M Hughes6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is advocated that interventions to improve clinical practice should be developed using a systematic approach and intervention development methods should be reported. However, previous interventions aimed at ensuring that older people receive appropriate polypharmacy have lacked details on their development. This study formed part of a multiphase research project which aimed to develop an intervention to improve appropriate polypharmacy in older people in primary care.Entities:
Keywords: APEASE; Behaviour change; Dispensing; Feasibility; Intervention; Polypharmacy; Prescribing; Theoretical domains framework
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27852287 PMCID: PMC5112618 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1907-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Systematic process of theory-based intervention development
Description of draft interventions
| Intervention 1: Patient-targeted intervention |
| Target group: older patients (≥65 years) receiving polypharmacy |
| Target behaviour: not applicablea |
| Intervention description: The intervention would be delivered to target patients either through the form of a letter from the GP inviting patients to attend a review consultation (‘Prompts/cues’) or as a coloured label that community pharmacists would attach to patients’ dispensed medication prompting patients to visit their GP for a review consultation (‘Prompts/cues’). GPs would then plan to ensure that patients are prescribed appropriate polypharmacy when they present at the practice (‘Action planning’). |
| Intervention 2: General practice-based intervention |
| Target group: GPs |
| Target behaviour: prescribing of appropriate polypharmacy |
| Intervention description: The intervention would be delivered through a short online video (or series of videos) demonstrating how GPs can prescribe appropriate polypharmacy during a typical consultation with an older patient (‘Modelling or demonstrating of behaviour’). Each video would last the duration of an average GP consultation (approximately 10 min) and also include feedback from both the GP and patient emphasising the positive outcomes of the consultation (‘Salience of consequences’). As complementary intervention components, GPs would make an explicit plan at practice meetings of when and how they would ensure that target patients are prescribed appropriate polypharmacy (‘Action planning’) and they would be prompted to carry out this plan by the receptionist when target patients present at the practice (‘Prompts/cues’). |
| Intervention 3: Community pharmacy-based intervention |
| Target group: community pharmacists |
| Target behaviour: dispensing of appropriate polypharmacy |
| Intervention description: The intervention would be delivered through a short online video (or series of videos), similar to that outlined in the GP-based intervention. The video would operationalise two BCTs (‘Modelling or demonstrating of behaviour’, ‘Salience of consequences’) by demonstrating how pharmacists can dispense appropriate polypharmacy during a typical encounter with an older patient and including feedback from both the pharmacist and patient emphasising the positive outcomes of this process. |
| Patients would be targeted using a collaborative approach between the GP practice and pharmacy. Patients would be identified initially by the GP practice. A list of GP-approved patients would be provided to the pharmacy which would authorise pharmacists to engage with target patients when they present at the pharmacy (‘Social support or encouragement’). |
| Having been provided with access to the online video(s) together with the list of target patients, pharmacists would make an explicit plan of when and how they would ensure that patients meeting inclusion criteria are dispensed appropriate polypharmacy (‘Action planning’). Pharmacists would be prompted to enact this plan when patients present at the pharmacy either by support staff or a note on the individual patient’s dispensing record (‘Prompts/cues’). Any recommended changes to patients’ current medications would be communicated to the GPs by the pharmacists. |
aNot applicable: the target behaviour of this draft intervention was not one of the two pre-specified target behaviours (i.e. prescribing and dispensing of appropriate polypharmacy)
Feasibility screening assessment of draft interventions (guided by a subset of APEASE criteriaa)
| Intervention 1: Patient-targeted intervention |
|
|
| Intervention 2: General practice-based intervention |
|
|
| Intervention 3: Community pharmacy-based intervention |
|
|
aThe subset of the APEASE criteria that were applied during the feasibility screening assessment consisted of affordability, practicability and acceptability