| Literature DB >> 28183322 |
Pierre Renaudin1,2, Karine Baumstarck3, Aurélie Daumas4, Marie-Anne Esteve5,6, Stéphane Gayet4, Pascal Auquier3, Michel Tsimaratos7, Patrick Villani4, Stéphane Honore5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early hospital readmission of patients after discharge is a public health problem. One major cause of hospital readmission is dysfunctions in integrated pathways between community and hospital care that can cause adverse drug events. Furthermore, the French ENEIS 2 study showed that 1.3% of hospital stays originated from serious adverse drug events in 2009. Pharmacy-led medication reviews at hospital transitions are an effective means of decreasing medication discrepancies when conducted at admission or discharge. However, it is difficult to assess the true impact of pharmacist-led medication reviews in specific high-risk populations, such as pediatric and geriatric populations. In such a context, it is important to demonstrate the effectiveness of medication reconciliation as part of a standardized medication review process-in pediatric and elderly populations-on all-cause readmissions in a large randomized controlled clinical trial. The aim of this study is to assess the impact of the pharmacist-led medication review on the rate of readmissions and/or death after hospital discharge and patient treatment satisfaction. METHODS/Entities:
Keywords: Clinical pharmacy; Geriatrics; Medication reconciliation; Medication review; Pediatrics; Pharmacists; Randomized controlled trial
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28183322 PMCID: PMC5301437 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-017-1798-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Template ConcReHosp Study
French partners
| Pharmacists | Center/department |
|---|---|
| Dr. Stéphane Honoré | Coordinating investigator, Pôle Pharmacie, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| Dr. Pierre Bertault-Peres | Pôle Pharmacie, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| Dr. Marie-Anne Estève | Pôle Pharmacie, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| M. Pierre Renaudin | Pôle Pharmacie, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| Dr. Clémence Tabélé | Pôle Pharmacie, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| Dr. Florian Correard | Pôle Pharmacie, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| Pediatric specialists | |
| Pr Michel Tsimaratos | Multidisciplinary Pediatric Care Unit, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| Internal medicine geriatric specialists | |
| Pr Patrick Villani | Internal Medicine Geriatric Care Unit, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| Dr Aurélie Daumas | Internal Medicine Geriatric Care Unit, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| Dr Stéphane Gayet | Internal Medicine Geriatric Care Unit, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| Methodologists | |
| Pr Pascal Auquier | Public health, Public Academic Teaching Hospital, Marseille |
| Dr Karine Baumstarck | Clinical Research Unit, Public Academic Teaching Hospital |
Selection criteria
| Inclusion criteria |
| - Subject aged under 18 or over 65 years |
| - Subject hospitalized in the multidisciplinary pediatric care unit or internal medicine, therapeutics, post-emergency care unit, regardless of the reason for admission |
| - Subject with or without any comorbidity |
| - Living in France |
| - With national public funded health insurance |
| Exclusion criteria |
| - Patients whose care requires regular/programmed re-hospitalization less than 30 days after discharge from initial hospitalization. |
| - Vulnerable persons according to French law (pregnant women, adults under guardianship, persons deprived of liberty) |
Fig. 2ConcReHosp study - flow of the intervention
Study procedure
| T1 | T2 | T3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consent | X | ||
| Randomization | X | ||
| Satisfaction | X | ||
| All-cause hospital readmission | X | ||
| All-cause emergency department visits | X | ||
| All-cause mortality | X | ||
| Consultations | X |
T1 baseline, T2 discharge at hospital, T3 30 days after discharge hospital