| Literature DB >> 31338204 |
Jacqueline Inch1, Frances Notman1, Christine M Bond1, David P Alldred2, Antony Arthur3, Annie Blyth4, Amrit Daffu-O'Reilly2, Joanna Ford5, Carmel M Hughes6, Vivienne Maskrey4, Anna Millar6, Phyo K Myint1, Fiona M Poland7, Lee Shepstone4, Arnold Zermansky8, Richard Holland9, David Wright10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Residents in care homes are often very frail, have complex medicine regimens and are at high risk of adverse drug events. It has been recommended that one healthcare professional should assume responsibility for their medicines management. We propose that this could be a pharmacist independent prescriber (PIP). This feasibility study aimed to test and refine the service specification and proposed study processes to inform the design and outcome measures of a definitive randomised controlled trial to examine the clinical and cost effectiveness of PIPs working in care homes compared to usual care. Specific objectives included testing processes for participant identification, recruitment and consent and assessing retention rates; determining suitability of outcome measures and data collection processes from care homes and GP practices to inform selection of a primary outcome measure; assessing service and research acceptability; and testing and refining the service specification.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31338204 PMCID: PMC6625047 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-019-0465-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Baseline and follow-up recruitment and retention
| Total number invited | Total number of EOIs (%) | Number participating at baseline | Number participating at follow-up (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP Practices | 346 | 44 (11.6) | 4 | 4 (100) |
| *PIPs | 14 | 6 (42.8) | 4 | 4 (100) |
| **Care Homes | 6 | n/a | 6 | 6 (100) |
| Residents | 86 | 53 (62.2) | 40 | 40 (100) (2 died) |
*Numbers based on two areas. In two areas, PIPs were approached sequentially until one agreed
**One care home in each of three areas and three care homes in one area
Fig. 1Care home resident recruitment flow chart
Fig. 2Summary of PIP service
Outcomes/outcome measures used in the feasibility study
| • STOPP/START (medication appropriateness tool) [ | |
| • Drug burden index [ | |
| • Fall rate per patient as per standard care home safety data collection | |
| • Adverse drug events as would normally be reported by a care home | |
| • Mortality | |
| • Barthel Index (physical functioning) [ | |
| • Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) (Cognitive functioning) [ | |
| • Qualidem [ | |
| • EuroQoL EQ-5D-5 L [2] (Proxy version 1). The proxy (care home staff, key worker) was asked to rate how he or she (i.e. the proxy), would rate the subject’s health (quality of life) [ | |
| • EuroQol EQ-5D-5 L face-to-face with resident (quality of life) [ |
Fig. 3CHIPPS WP5 feasibility study CONSORT Diagram, 20 June 2017
Data generated by proposed outcome measures at baseline and follow-up
| Measure | Baseline | Follow-up |
|---|---|---|
STOPP mean (per patient) (range) SD# Median (IQR) | 3.27 (0–7) 1.96 3.0 (2.0–4.25) | 2.54 (0–5) 1.24, 2.0 (2.0–3.25) |
START mean (per patient) (range) SD# Median (IQR) | 2.35 (0–6)1.42 2 (1–3) | 2.05 (0–6) 1.55 2.0 (1.0–3.0) |
| *Falls in past 3 months (total number) | 12 | 10 |
| Falls in past 3 months (number of patients falling) | 9/40 (20%) | 7/40 (17.5%) |
Falls per person (mean (range) SD) Median (IQR) | 0.33 (0–3) 0.694 0.0 (0–0) | 0.25 (0–2) 0.588 0.0 (0–0) |
Barthel mean (range) SD Median (IQR) | 6.53 (0–17) 5.50 6.5 (1–9) | 6.38 (0–19) 5.51 6.0 (1.0–10.0) |
***MMSE mean (range) SD Median (IQR) Number | 20.13 (9–30) 7.03 21.0 (14.25–25.5) ( | 20.79 (11–29) 5.90 20.5 (15–26) ( |
| Drug burden index (DBI) score 0 (n (%)) | 14 (35%) | 14 (35%) |
**Drug burden index (DBI) Mean (range) SD Median (IQR) | 26 (65%) 1.11 (0.14–3.37) 0.74 1.035 (0.5–1.5) | 26 (65%) 0.93 (0.14–3.34) 0.67 0.76 (0.5–1.17 |
Number of medicines per patient mean (range) SD) Median (IQR) (includes topical preparations) | 9.3 (1–26) 5.9 8.5 (6–12) | 8.7 (0–31) 6.0 8 (5–10) |
Total Qualidem mean, (range) SD, Median, (IQR) | 93 (67–130) 15.55 91.0 (79.25–101.5) | 77.85 (31–109) 18.32 79.0 (71.0–92.5) |
a. Care relationship (mean (range) SD, Median (IQR) | 15.33 (10–23) 3.53 14.0 (12.25–18.0) | 15.83 (4–21) 5.00 16.0 (13.0–20.0) |
b. Positive Affect mean (range) SD Median (IQR) | 14.33 (6–24) 5.50 14.5 (9.0–18.75) | 12.43 (2–18) 4.33 14.0 (8.5–16.0) |
c. Negative Affect mean (range) SD Median (IQR) | 8.25 (3–12) 2.25 9.0 (6.0–10.0) | 5.35 (0–9) 2.28 5.0 (4.0–7.0) |
d. Restless/tense behaviour mean (range) SD Median (IQR) | 8.48 (3–12) 2.59 9.0 (6.25–10.0) | 5.13 (0–9) 2.41 5.0 (4.0–7.0) |
e. Positive self-image mean (range) SD Median (IQR) | 7.88 (3–11) 1.88 8.0 (6.0–9.0) | 6.23 (0–9) 2.24 6.0 (4.25–8.75) |
f. Social Relations mean (range) SD Median (IQR) | 12.03 (7–22) 3.68 11.0 (10.0–13.0) | 11.13 (1–18) 4.79 10.5 (8.25–15.75) |
g. Social Isolation (mean (range) SD Median (IQR) | 6.00 (3–11) 1.45 6.0 (5.0–7.0) | 4.60 (10–9) 1.99 5.0 (4.0–6.0) |
h. Feeling at home mean (range) SD Median (IQR) | 8.88 (6–14) 2.22 8.0 (7.0–11.0) | 9.68 (1–12) 2.74 11.0 (8.0–12.0) |
†EQ 5D-5 L (self) (Mean (range) SD) median (IQR) N | 0.449 (−0.281–0.951) 0.335 0.379 (0.279–0.719) | 0.572 (0.027–1.000) 0.327 0.585 (0.34–0.77) |
†EQ 5D-5 L (proxy) (mean (range) SD) Median (IQR) N | 0.434 (−0.027–0.896) 0.229 0.356 (0.267–0.664) | 0.406 (−0.019–0.887) 0.236 0.341 (0.206–0.581) |
†EQ 5D-5 L Baseline VAS (self) (mean (range) SD) Median (IQR) N | 57.5 (0–100) 31.9 67.5 (32.5–75) | 62.9 (10–99) 30.2 75 (30–85) |
†EQ 5D-5 L Baseline VAS (proxy) (mean (range) SD) Median (IQR) N | 51.6 (2–99) 23.9 57.5 (38.75–66.25) | 50.2 (2–90) 27.3 50 (30–70) |
| Adverse drug events related to intervention (ADEs) in past three months | 0/40 (0%) | 0/40 (0%) |
#Number of individual medicines which would need to be altered (stopped or started) after researchers with a pharmacy qualification applied STOPPSTART criteria. *NICE (2017) https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/qs86/resources/falls-in-older-people-pdf-2098911933637, defines a fall as an unintentional or unexpected loss of balance resulting in coming to rest on the floor, the ground or an object below knee level. **Calculation based only on those with any DBI score. †ED5D-5 L index obtained from Devlin et al. [22] on https://euroqol.org, accessed June 2017. ***Average MMSE for the 12 participants who completed the MMSE face to face at both base line and follow-up was 20.5 and 22.1, respectively