| Literature DB >> 30143003 |
Sanne Verdoorn1,2, Henk-Frans Kwint3, Jeanet Blom4, Jacobijn Gussekloo4,5, Marcel L Bouvy6,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Clinical medication reviews (CMR) are increasingly performed in older patients with polypharmacy. Studies have shown positive effects of CMR on process- and intermediate outcomes, like drug-related problems (DRPs). Little effect has been shown on clinical outcomes, like hospital admissions or health-related quality of life (HR-QoL). In particular, HR-QoL is related to the individual health-related goals and complaints of patients. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of a CMR focused on personal goals on HR-QoL and health-related complaints in older patients with polypharmacy.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical medication review; Elderly; Goal attainment scaling; Pharmacists; Polypharmacy; Primary care; Randomised controlled trial
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30143003 PMCID: PMC6109293 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-018-0877-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1Study design DREAMeR-study
Health-related complaints measured in the questionnaire
| Type of health-related complaint | |
|---|---|
| Pain | |
| Itching | |
| Dyspnoea | |
| Problems with walking (mobility) | |
| Dizziness | |
| Drowsiness/sedation | |
| Intestinal complaints (constipation/diarrhoea) | |
| Gastric complaints (reflux or ulcer) | |
| Forgetfulness | |
| Fatigue | |
| Dry mouth | |
| Incontinence | |
| Other |
Fig. 2Example of question about the complaint “pain”
Overview of different DRP and intervention types
| DRP type | Intervention type |
|---|---|
| Overtreatment | Drug added |
| Drug not effective | Drug ceased |
| Suboptimal therapy | Drug replaced |
| (potential) Adverse effect | Dosage regimen changed |
| Dose too high | Dosage form changed |
| Dose too low | Performed monitoring |
| Usage problem | Information/advice provided |
| Clinical relevant contra-indication | Medication synchronized |
| Clinical relevant interaction | Other |
| No Intervention |
Example goal attainment scale
| Problem | Goal | Plan | Evaluation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pain | Reduce pain from VAS-score 6 to VAS-score 4 | Start with painkillers; e.g. paracetamol in accurate dose | After 2-4 weeks | |
| Was the goal achieved? | Description | Example | Score | |
| Yes? | A lot more | No pain anymore or VAS-score < 3 | +2 | |
| A little more | Pain VAS-score 3 | +1 | ||
| As expected | Pain VAS-score 4 | 0 | ||
| No? | Partially achieved | Pain VAS-score 5 | -1 | |
| No change | Pain VAS-score 6 | -2 | ||
| Got worse | Pain VAS-score >6 | -3 | ||
Overview outcome measures DREAMeR study
| Parameters | Instrument or data source |
|---|---|
| Baseline assessment | |
| Socio-Demographics | Data questionnaire |
| Complex-problems | ISCOPE questionnaire |
| Number and type of medication | Extraction dispensing records pharmacy |
| Type of personal goals (intervention group) | Assessed by pharmacist and patient |
| Primary outcomes | |
| Health-related quality of life | EQ-5D-5L and EQ-VAS |
| Health-related complaints | Self-developed data questionnaire |
| Secondary outcomes | |
| Health care consumption | Dutch Medical Consumption ( |
| Number of changed drugs (drugs added and ceased) | Extraction dispensing records pharmacy |
| Scores on Goal attainment Scales (intervention group) | |
| Drug-Related Problems (intervention group) | Recorded in the SAMRT with encodings of Table |
| Proposals and interventions of the pharmaceutical care plan (intervention group) | Recorded in the SAMRT with encodings of Table |