| Literature DB >> 29077019 |
Alan Kearney1, Ciaran Halleran2, Elaine Walsh3, Derina Byrne4, Jennifer Haugh5, Laura J Sahm6,7.
Abstract
Purpose: Pharmacist-led medication reviews in hospitals have shown improvement in patient outcomes. The aim of this study is to describe the prevalence and nature of pharmacist interventions (PIs) following a medication review in an Irish teaching hospital.Entities:
Keywords: Ireland; adverse drug event; hospital pharmacy; medication review; pharmacist intervention
Year: 2017 PMID: 29077019 PMCID: PMC5748541 DOI: 10.3390/pharmacy5040060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacy (Basel) ISSN: 2226-4787
Probability scores with examples for the assessment of potential clinical harm of the PIs provided to raters.
| Probability of ADE Occurring | Probability Score | Example |
|---|---|---|
| No harm expected | 0 | Pharmacist suggests changing a person from esomeprazole to omeprazole exclusively for economic reasons |
| Very low | 0.01 | Patient regularly takes a bisphosphonate, but medication omitted from hospital kardex |
| Low | 0.1 | Patient takes an antibiotic twice daily, when recommended dose would be three times daily |
| Medium | 0.4 | Metformin dose not reduced despite patient demonstrating renal impairment |
| High | 0.6 | Patient prescribed amiodarone while taking digoxin without any reduction in digoxin dose |
ADE: adverse drug event.
Demographics of study patients.
| Demographic | Description | Patients with PI(s) | Patients with no PI(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender (n) | Male | 80 (37.6%) | 458 (45.7%) |
| Female | 133 (62.4%) | 545 (54.3%) | |
| Specialty (n) | Medicine | 191 (89.7%) | 820 (78.2%) |
| Surgery | 22 (10.3%) | 229 (21.8%) | |
| Age (years) | Median | 74 | 65 |
| IQR | 15 | 25 | |
| ≥65 years | |||
| Length of hospital stay (days) | Median | 10.4 | 4.7 |
| IQR | 11.4 | 6.9 |
PI(s): pharmacist intervention(s); n: number of patients; IQR: interquartile range.
Types and prevalence of PIs (n = 313) in 213 patients.
| Type of PI | No. of PIs (%) |
|---|---|
| Co-prescribe same drug class | 45 (14.38%) |
| Co-prescribe same drug | 42 (13.42%) |
| Frequency of administration unclear | 24 (7.67%) |
| Dose charted unclear | 13 (4.15%) |
| Drug charted unclear | 4 (1.28%) |
| More than approved normal frequency | 21 (6.71%) |
| Less than approved normal frequency | 17 (5.43%) |
| More than approved normal dose | 25 (7.99%) |
| Less than approved normal dose | 8 (2.56%) |
| Pharmacokinetic | 30 (9.58%) |
| Pharmacodynamic | 2 (0.64%) |
PI: pharmacist intervention; PIs: pharmacist interventions. 1 As per Summary of Product Characteristics; 2 As per British National Formulary 71 [12]; 3 Relative to admission notes, this intervention was opportunistic; 4 For example, this includes medicines incorrectly transcribed.
Figure 1Example of unclear insulin dose.
Prevalence and examples of PIs identified in this study based upon the likelihood of an ADE occurring.
| Likelihood of an ADE Occurring | Number (%) of PIs 1 | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Zero (no harm expected) | 1 (0.32%) | Omeprazole prescribed as a PRN medicine with no doctor‘s signature |
| Very low | 11 (3.51%) | Thiamine prescribed 200 mg OD as a regular medicine and two administration times circled |
| Low | 111 (35.46%) | Combivent® 2 and Tiotropium both prescribed as regular medicines |
| Medium | 169 (53.99%) | Solpadol® 3 II QDS prescribed as a regular medicine and Paracetamol 1 g QDS prescribed as a PRN medicine |
| High | 21 (6.71%) | Enoxaparin and Rivaroxaban both prescribed as regular medicines |
ADE: adverse drug event; PRN: “as required”; OD: once daily; QDS: four times daily. 1 This is based on taking the median probability score of the five healthcare professionals who rated the PIs; 2 Combivent® is a combination product licensed in Ireland that contains ipratropium and salbutamol; 3 Solpadol® is a combination product licensed in Ireland that contains paracetamol and codeine.