| Literature DB >> 32114469 |
Jason Tang1, Madalina Toma1, Nicola M Gray1, Joke Delvaux1,2, Bruce Guthrie3,4, Aileen Grant5, Eilidh M Duncan6, Tobias Dreischulte7,8.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The quality and safety of drug therapy in primary care are global concerns. The Pharmacist and Data-Driven Quality Improvement in Primary Care (P-DQIP) intervention aims to improve prescribing safety via an informatics tool, which facilitates proactive management of drug therapy risks (DTRs) by health-board employed pharmacists with established roles in general practices. Study objectives were (1) to identify and prioritise factors that could influence P-DQIP implementation from the perspective of practice pharmacists and (2) to identify potentially effective, acceptable and feasible strategies to support P-DQIP implementation.Entities:
Keywords: behavioural change techniques; behavioural change wheel; polypharmacy review; prescribing safety; quality improvement; theoretical domains framework
Year: 2020 PMID: 32114469 PMCID: PMC7050331 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-033574
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1The behavioural change wheel. Reproduced from Michie and Atkins.19
Figure 2Intended drug therapy risk management model with behaviours to be targeted by the P-DQIP informatics tool. The dotted lines denote potential pathways, that is, pharmacists may decide on a DTR management strategy with or without prior consultation with patients or other clinicians. DTR, drug therapy risk; GP, general practitioner; IT, information technology; P-DQIP, Pharmacist and Data-driven Quality Improvement in Primary Care.
Sample quotes from pharmacists mapped to implementation tasks and relevant theoretical domains
| COM-B construct | Quote no | Count of relevant quotes | Count of participants with relevant quotes (count reflecting ‘expected’ barriers) |
|
| |||
| COM-B construct: psychological capability | |||
| TDF domain: knowledge | |||
| Specific belief: therapeutics | |||
| Specific belief: patient preferences/ circumstances | 1.‘… your therapeutics has got to be up to scratch’. (Pharmacist 09) | 15 (0) | 3 (0) |
| TDF domain: skill | 2.‘If I don’t know the patient I would speak to the GP because I might be making suggestions that he’s tried before. He’ll say, oh there’s no point in trying to stop that because, I’ve tried that a million times before’. (Pharmacist 10) | 4 (1) | 4 (1) |
| Specific belief: clinical | |||
| COM-B construct: reflective motivation | 3.‘you might decide oh I want to look at those indicators but maybe I don’t [feel] confident enough to make the changes myself, or I would be then having to refer back to other practitioners, so you might want to up-skill your clinical skills in that…’ (Pharmacist 06) | 13 (4) | 8 (4) |
| TDF domain: memory, attention and decision making | |||
| Specific belief: decision making | |||
| Specific belief: attention | 4.‘I was hoping that the P-DQIP tool would help identify the patients that need to come in, to help to review them, because at the moment you’re sitting with 6000 patients on repeat meds and where do you start’. (Pharmacist 08) | 10 (0) | 5 (0) |
| TDF domain: beliefs about capabilities | 5.‘That [the informatics tool] would really help, ‘cause you may not have thought about this interaction or something, you may just be prescribing, you might not have thought about the fact you can't put these two drugs together or perhaps the patient’s age or whatever’. (Pharmacist 14) | 5 (0) | 4 (0) |
| Specific belief: professional confidence | |||
| 6.‘I’ve been a practice pharmacist for a long time, so, I’ve seen a lot of cases and worked with a lot of patients with a lot of different conditions and sometimes that confidence, it just comes with experience doesn’t it?’ (Pharmacist 09) | 17 (4) | 11 (3) | |
| COM-B construct: | 7.‘I wouldn’t be confident in going and stopping some of the anti-psychotics and schizophrenic patients and things like that if they were under mental health’. (Pharmacist 08) | ||
| TDF domain: emotion | Reflective motivation | ||
| Specific belief: | |||
| 8.‘I feel a greater weight of responsibility when I am actually prescribing for somebody, it takes me quite a lot to put the pen to paper to actually do the prescription’. (Pharmacist 13) | 2 (0) | 2 (0) | |
|
| |||
| COM-B construct: psychological capability | |||
| TDF domain: knowledge | |||
| Specific belief: task environment | 9.‘You’ve got(…)to understand how a practice works and how it interacts with other care environments …’ (Pharmacist 09) | 15 (0) | 9 (0) |
| TDF domain: skill | |||
| Specific belief: interpersonal | 10.‘You're going to have to get to know the people that you're working with, and I think for the first little while you might say right I'll speak to the GPs about the changes first of all, just to demonstrate that you're capable, you're not going to do something dangerous and you're not going to just spend all your time(…)telling the patients that the GPs are rubbish…’ (Pharmacist 11) | 15 (0) | 8 (0) |
| COM-B construct: reflective motivation | |||
|
| |||
| Specific belief: personal self-confidence | 11.‘I'd be quite happy to say, yeah, I would lead on that in the practice; I'd quite happily take that… I'd take it to the GPs and say right, this is what we're going to do’. (Pharmacist 11) | 4 (0) | 4 (0) |
| TDF domain: professional/social role and identity | |||
| Specific belief: professional boundaries | 12.‘I will make my recommendations, they’ll be discussed round the table by various professionals and then there’ll be a decision made as to whether they’re appropriate actions or not and how they’re going to be implemented’. (Pharmacist 09) | 7 (0) | 4 (0) |
| COM-B construct: social opportunity | |||
| TDF domain: social influences | |||
| Specific belief: interpersonal trust | 13.‘My GPs are like that with me because I’ve been with them for a long time and they know what I can do and what I don’t. They know that if I’m in doubt about anything I would go and ask them. If you see what I mean? They’d be supportive of me, whereas I’m not so sure if I went someplace else how that would be without those GPs knowing that Pharmacist there’. (Pharmacist 08) | 21 (2) | 13 (1) |
| Specific belief: practices’ staff interest in collaboration | 14.‘We have weekly meetings, multidisciplinary meetings and we discuss vulnerable patients who are maybe tinkering on the edge of needing admission to hospital and maybe just need a little bit more support at home’. (Pharmacist 10) | 27 (4) | 8 (3) |
| Specific belief: practices’ perception of pharmacist role | 15.‘I’m concerned now that they look at me and say, oh she’s just here to, help cut costs, because I think they can… because it’s such a big thing and I don’t think it’s me that’s doing it I think it’s the management that are doing it and it’s filtering through to them … I don’t feel comfortable with that because I think we’re there as a quality thing. Obviously cost does come into it, but, that does concern me to a certain extent’. (Pharmacist 02) | 8 (3) | 5 (3) |
| Specific belief: practices’ perception of pharmacist skills | 16.‘If every decision that they're making is questioned and the pharmacist then feels that they're unwilling to make any changes because it's just going to come back and hit them in the face kind of thing’. (Pharmacist 13) | 12 (2) | 9 (2) |
|
| |||
| COM-B construct: Psychological capability | |||
| TDF domain: behavioural regulation | |||
| Specific belief: action/work planning | 17.‘f we get that sort of system set up, that would be fine, you know, it’s not that kind of thing I’m worried about. It’s actually having the protected time to do it’. (Pharmacist 08) | 17 (1) | 10 (1) |
| COM-B construct: reflective motivation | |||
| TDF domain: professional/social role and identity | |||
| Specific belief: professional identity | 18.‘The core of our job is patient safety and these drugs are obviously very, very risky to patients, so I think they [other pharmacists] should be engaged’. (Pharmacist 12) | 11 (0) | 6 (0) |
| TDF domain: beliefs about consequences | |||
| Specific belief: review process | 19.‘The positive would be for me, it would make polypharmacy reviews a lot easier and give you areas to focus on which is good’. (Pharmacist 12) | 24 (0) | 12 (0) |
| Specific belief: patient benefit | 20.‘Helping to reduce the high risk prescribing basically and help some of the patients out there that shouldn’t be on drugs that they are currently on and harming them. Well, you’re going to stop them falling, ending up in hospital. Some of the dreadful side effects that some of the drugs have. A lot of them don’t realise they’ve got a dry mouth because of their drugs…’ (Pharmacist 08) | 6 (0) | 6 (0) |
| TDF domain: optimism | |||
| Specific belief: positive attitudes | 21.‘Yes, it is something else to do but, if we do this it will hopefully help pre-empt problems in the long run’. (Pharmacist 9) | 8 (0) | 7 (0) |
| TDF domain: goals | |||
| Specific belief: professional recognition | 22.‘When I did the Polypharmacy pilot I was working late every night because I was doing this really in addition to my other work.… I wanted it to be done properly so I invested a lot of my energy and time to doing that … maybe I wouldn’t do it in so much depth now but, at that point, I did want to know… because we were at the beginning. The first time I’d work with the Consultant and the GP together so I wanted to pre-empt any questions I would be asked’. (Pharmacist 03) | 13 (0) | 9 (0) |
| Specific belief: professional satisfaction | 23.[in a previous multidisciplinary project on polypharmacy] the consultant from Medicine for the Elderly was, very much taking the lead,… so there was a certain amount of professional satisfaction but not, not the same as you would, if you were actually doing the review on your own’. (Pharmacist 13) | 1 (0) | 1 (0) |
| TDF domain: reinforcement | |||
| Specific belief: prompts/cues | 24.‘As you're doing it that would be a way to prompt you, and as I said if you see one you might go and search for patients on say, I mean… there's some computer systems where they flag up interactions and from that you may think oh well, OK, this seems to be coming up a lot, I can go and search and see if there's any more patients and then you would then set up and probably go, and go and have a look’. (Pharmacist 14) | 8 (0) | 5 (0) |
| Specific belief: goal/target setting | 25.‘…I don't know, setting people targets … I wouldn’t, I would steer away from that in like, you know, in the practice …, 'cause I know they've tried it … and it, it's not fabulously helpful. You’d pick the easy ones wouldn’t you’. (Pharmacist 01) | 3 (0) | 3 (0) |
| Specific belief: | 26.‘There's always a list and nobody wants to be at the bottom, so it's nice to see yourself… we've improved and got better, you sort of, you can rank yourself against the others and see how well you're doing…’ (Pharmacist 03) | 7 (0) | 5 (0) |
| COM-B construct: physical opportunity | |||
| TDF domain: environmental context and resources | |||
| Specific belief: competing demands on time—health board | 27.‘We have to do cost-savings but sometimes, …we may get asked just to drop some of the work we do, safety work we do, and cost savings are always a, a priority’. (Pharmacist 01) | 9 (6) | 8 (5) |
| 28.‘It’s actually having the protected time to do it and not just asking us to do something else at the end of a really, really long day’. (Pharmacist 08). | |||
| Specific belief: competing demands on time—practices | 29.‘And then I went away on three weeks’ holiday and I’ve come back and they said oh we’re so pleased to see you [laughter]. The GP even stopped me in the car park and he says oh, fantastic, he says, I can send my discharges your way now again, because they need some help’. (Pharmacist 08) | 1 (1) | 1 (1) |
| Specific belief: Staff resources—pharmacy | 30.‘So this particular practice has a Prescribing Support Technician on a Thursday every week doing work, because it's a high-cost practice, but like the practice that I came from before that, didn’t have technician cover for months and so the cost-minimisation work has just been done by me’. (Pharmacist 13) | 5 (0) | 3 (0) |
| Specific belief: Staff resources—practice | 31.‘At the moment, because of the lack of GPs in the practice, there’s not the appetite to move forward with it because we could identify lots of patients and there’s just not the staff to agree the changes that need to be made’. (Pharmacist 09) | 5 (1) | 4 (1) |
COM-B, Capability-Opportunity-Motivation-Behaviour; GP, general practitioner; P-DQIP, Pharmacist and Data-Driven Quality Improvement in Primary Care; TDF, Theoretical Domains Framework.
Prioritised theoretical domains and mapping of intervention functions, policies and behavioural change techniques (BCTs) to support the three target behaviours
| COM-B construct | Relevance to pharmacist-driven management of DTRs | Intervention functions considered | BCTs/policies for selected intervention functions/reasons for non-selection of intervention functions |
|
| |||
|
| |||
|
| Clinical skills vary by pharmacist and type of drug therapy risk | Training | Instruction on how to perform a behaviour/modelling/ demonstration of behaviour: Provide brief and detailed written guidance on managing drug therapy risks targeted by the P-DQIP tool; demonstrate how to use the P-DQIP tool to identify and manage DTRs. |
|
| Support in prioritising patients and identifying DTRs valued | Enablement | Prompts/cues: P-DQIP tool identifies patients with drug therapy risks at practice level |
|
| |||
|
| Support in identifying DTRs at the point of review | Environmental restructuring | Prompts/cues: P-DQIP tool identifies drug therapy risks in individual patients |
| Training | None: not feasible | ||
| Incentivisation | None: not feasible or acceptable | ||
| Coercion | None: not feasible or acceptable | ||
|
| |||
|
| |||
|
| The quality of relationships between pharmacists and GPs varies | Training | Problem solving (to address interpersonal skills): Prompt pharmacists to analyse interpersonal barriers for collaboration with GPs and develop strategies to overcome them (eg, to build trust). |
|
| |||
|
| Practices’ trust in pharmacists’ skills varies; practices‘ perceptions of pharmacist’s role as mainly cost-cutting limits collaboration in patient care; practices’ interest in P-DQIP work is crucial but expected to be variable. | Environmental restructuring | Communication/marketing: Promotion of the P-DQIP tool among GP clusters as a means to monitor and drive quality improvement in DTR management |
| Enablement | Self-monitoring of behaviour (GP practices): Provide tools to facilitate monitoring of review activity and trends in patients with DTRs. | ||
| Modelling | None: not feasible because of the heterogeneity of social context. | ||
| Restriction | None: not feasible (although pharmacists thought a policy that protects pharmacist time from other routine demands was deemed desirable). | ||
|
| |||
|
| |||
|
| Challenge of fitting P-DQIP work into work routines | Training | Action-planning: Encourage pharmacist to make detailed plans on how to introduce pharmacist-driven DTR management to practices. |
|
| Pharmacists struggle to fit medication reviews in with their routine work; pharmacists will avoid or procrastinate reviewing patients with more complex drug therapy risks. | Training | Goal setting (behaviour): Encourage pharmacist to set themselves achievable goals, for example, conduct at least one review per day |
| Enablement | Self-monitoring of behaviour (pharmacists): Provide tools to facilitate monitoring of review activity and trends in patients with DTRs. | ||
|
| |||
|
| Pharmacists may not perceive P-DQIP reviews as a health board priority | Environmental restructuring | Monitoring of behaviour by others: Pharmacists will include their DTR management activity in their monthly report to line managers. |
| Training | None: not feasible | ||
| Incentivisation | None: not feasible or acceptable | ||
| Coercion | None: not feasible or acceptable | ||
|
| |||
|
| Belief that health board demands for cost-saving work will conflict with P-DQIP delivery; belief that practices’ demands on pharmacists’ work will conflict with P-DQIP delivery (especially when there is limited support from pharmacy technicians). | Training | Action-planning: see under skills |
| Restriction | None: not feasible (although pharmacists thought a policy that protects pharmacist time from other routine demands was deemed desirable). | ||
| Environmental restructuring | Guideline: health board specifies priorities for the P-DQIP work that initially contain the number of drug therapy risks to be targeted for review by pharmacists. | ||
|
| Relevance to pharmacist-driven management of DTRs. | Rationale for exclusion | |
|
| |||
|
| |||
|
| Knowledge of pharmacotherapy, task environment and patient preferences/ circumstances | Not prioritised for intervention, because reported limitations of pharmacists’ abilities appeared to relate more to managing DTRs (skill) rather than to gaps in pharmacotherapeutic knowledge. It was considered unfeasible to change pharmacists’ knowledge of the task environment (requires experience) and of patient preferences/circumstances (requires patient contact). | |
|
| |||
|
| Belief in own capabilities is influenced by perceived knowledge, skill, other work demands and support from practices, which is variable. | Not prioritised for intervention since it would likely require an individually tailored intervention (infeasible). However, it was believed that this domain could be indirectly influenced by targeting skill, memory/attention/decision making, behavioural regulation, environmental context/resources and social influences. | |
|
| |||
|
| Anxiety towards/professional satisfaction from autonomous decision making | Not prioritised for intervention since mitigating anxiety would require an individually tailored intervention (infeasible); Enhancing professional autonomy deemed infeasible as part of the intervention. | |
|
| |||
|
| |||
|
| Pharmacist shares responsibility for therapeutic decisions with other clinicians. | Not prioritised for intervention. Although greater professional autonomy could facilitate P-DQIP implementation, it was deemed infeasible to enhance it as part of the intervention. | |
|
| Professional recognition | Not prioritised for intervention since aims of P-DQIP appeared to be aligned with personal goals. | |
|
| |||
|
| |||
|
| Impact on work processes and patient outcomes. | Not prioritised for intervention since pharmacists appeared to quickly understand the differences to current work processes as well as potential advantages and disadvantages; it was deemed infeasible to change pharmacists’ perception of increased workload. | |
|
| Belief that P-DQIP work can be implemented despite increased workload. | Not prioritised for intervention since it would likely require an individually tailored intervention (infeasible). | |
COM-B, Capability-Opportunity-Motivation-Behaviour; GP, general practitioner; P-DQIP, Pharmacist and Data-Driven Quality Improvement in Primary Care; TDF, Theoretical Domains Framework.
Figure 3Final components of the P-DQIP intervention. Components are colour coded in terms of which COM-B category they primarily target (red: psychological capability; yellow: automatic motivation; amber: reflective motivation; light green: physical opportunity; dark green: social opportunity). Delivery mechanisms and content are numbered and specified in text below. (1) P-DQIP informatics tool integrated into existing Medicines management software (Scottish Therapeutics Utility): (1a) Search engine to identify patients triggering 18 composite and 69 individual indicators of drug therapy risks; (1b) Structured summaries of a patient’s ongoing medical problems, investigations and current medications; (1c) Highlighting of a patient’s identified drug therapy risks and brief management instructions; (1b) Facility to run weekly reports on the number of medication reviews submitted via the P-DQIP tool, with further details on medication changes, follow-up actions and time taken; (1e) Web-based application allowing practices to compare levels and trends of targeted prescribing to practices in their ‘cluster’, their HSCP and the health board. (2) Written educational material providing referenced evidence and guidance around targeted prescribing. (3) Half-day workshop with pharmacists affiliated with practices in the same ‘cluster’, moderated by P-DQIP lead pharmacists. Introduction of action planning instruments, goal setting and opportunity for pharmacists to discuss anticipated implementation problems and solutions. (4) Phased implementation of the review work with initial focus on patients at increased risk of a small number of specific adverse drug events. (5) Request to attend routine meetings of GP clusters by P-DQIP lead pharmacists to promote the use of the P-DQIP informatics tool to identify and facilitate the review of patients with DTRs and to monitor progress towards reducing targeted prescribing at practice and cluster levels. (6) Offer of payment of £450 per practice, which is conditional on providing evidence of conducting the following tasks: (1) Nominate a GP-lead for P-DQIP; (2) GP-pharmacist meeting to assign roles and responsibilities in P-DQIP work; (3) ongoing support for pharmacists in managing DTRs identified by the P-DQIP tool; (4) number of patients with DTRs reviewed by the practice over the P-DQIP intervention period. COM-B, Capability-Opportunity-Motivation-Behaviour; DTR, drug therapy risk; GP, general practitioner; HSCP, Health and Social Care Partnership; P-DQIP, pharmacist and data driven quality improvement in primary care.