| Literature DB >> 31964398 |
Christine M Bond1, Richard Holland2, David P Alldred3, Antony Arthur4, Garry Barton5, Annie Blyth5, James Desborough6, Joanna Ford7, Christine Handford8, Helen Hill9, Carmel M Hughes10, Vivienne Maskrey5, Kate Massey8, Phyo K Myint11, Nigel Norris12, Fiona M Poland13, Lee Shepstone5, David Turner5, Arnold Zermansky14, David Wright6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Prescribing, monitoring and administration of medicines in care homes could be improved. Research has identified the need for one person to assume overall responsibility for the management of medicines within each care home. and shown that a pharmacist independent prescriber service is feasible in this context. AIMS ANDEntities:
Keywords: Care homes; Older people; Pharmacist prescribing; Polypharmacy; Randomised controlled trial
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31964398 PMCID: PMC6975047 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-019-3827-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Obtaining third-party consent for residents without capacity in the three devolved home countries
A letter will be sent to the supporting relative/friend/potential consultee from the GP, enclosing the Information Sheet and Advice Form for signature. The Information Sheet explains the study and asks if, in their opinion, their friend/relative would have wanted to participate, if they had been able to decide this for themselves, and, if they felt that their friend/relative would have participated, would they be willing to act as consultee and give permission on their friend/relative’s behalf? The potential consultee is asked to complete an Advice Form and send it back within 2 weeks. If there is no response within 2 weeks, another similar letter is sent, asking for return of the completed Advice Form within 1 week, stating that, if this not returned the care home will assume that the friend/relative cannot be a consultee and will then identify someone for this role from within the care home; this person will not be the care home manager and will be completely independent of the study. Capacity to consent is described in the Mental Capacity Act 2005 [ | |
The letter requesting permission, on behalf of the resident, will be sent to the resident’s Welfare Power of Attorney (WPoA), along with the Information Sheet and Consent Form. If there is no response within 2 weeks, another similar letter is sent. If the WPoA returns the signed Consent Form, then the resident will be recruited into the study. If the WPoA does not return the Form, the resident will not be recruited. In Scotland, capacity to consent is described in the Adults with Incapacity Act (Scotland) 2000 [ |
Fig. 1Recruitment flow chart
Fig. 2Participant time line
Serious Adverse Event (SAE) causality definitions
| Event type | Causality assessment | Description |
|---|---|---|
| SAE | Unrelated | There is no evidence or rationale for any causal relationship |
| SUSAR (Sudden Unexpected Serious Adverse Event) | Likely to be related | There is evidence, and a rationale, to suggest a causal relationship and other possible contributing factors can be ruled out |