| Literature DB >> 32595137 |
Karen Cardwell1, Susan M Smith1, Barbara Clyne1,2, Laura McCullagh3,4, Emma Wallace1, Ciara Kirke5, Tom Fahey1, Frank Moriarty6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Limited evidence suggests integration of pharmacists into the general practice team could improve medicines management for patients, particularly those with multimorbidity and polypharmacy. This study aimed to develop and assess the feasibility of an intervention involving pharmacists, working within general practices, to optimise prescribing in Ireland.Entities:
Keywords: health economics; organisation of health services; primary care; quality in health care
Year: 2020 PMID: 32595137 PMCID: PMC7322285 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-035087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Baseline characteristics of the general practices enrolled in the study
| Characteristics of general practices (n=4) | Mean per practice | Range |
| Total number of GPs | 4.25 | 2–9 |
| Percentage of male GPs | 52.9 | 0–66.7 |
| Percentage full-time GPs | 88.2 | 77.8–100 |
| Number of GP sessions/week | 27 | 11–64 |
| Number of patients | 8830.5 | 1777–16 631 |
| Percentage of GMS-eligible patients | 45.5 | 13.6–95.0 |
| Percentage of patients aged ≥65 years | 16.1 | 10.8–24.8 |
GMS, General Medical Services; GP, general practitioner.
Prescribing issues identified by pharmacists during medication reviews (both chart based and face to face)
| Indicators | Cases | Addressed | Missing addressed data* |
| Potentially inappropriate prescribing | |||
| Proton pump inhibitors | 400 (44.2) | 169 (47.9) | 47 (11.8) |
| Short-acting benzodiazepine | 83 (9.2) | 8 (11.4) | 13 (15.7) |
| Non-steroidal anti-inflammatories | 75 (8.3) | 27 (38.6) | 5 (6.7) |
| Duplicate therapeutic drug class | 62 (6.8) | 51 (87.9) | 4 (6.5) |
| Tricyclic antidepressants | 46 (5.1) | 9 (25.7) | 11 (23.9) |
| Long-acting benzodiazepine | 28 (3.1) | 2 (7.7) | 2 (7.1) |
| Incorrect instructions | 27 (3.0) | 24 (96.0) | 2 (7.4) |
| Opioids | 26 (2.9) | 9 (45.0) | 6 (23.1) |
| Diuretics | 24 (2.7) | 14 (63.6) | 2 (8.3) |
| Others | 23 (2.5) | 8 (53.3) | 8 (34.8) |
| Aspirin | 20 (2.2) | 6 (42.9) | 6 (30.0) |
| Direct oral anticoagulants | 16 (1.8) | 9 (69.2) | 3 (18.8) |
| Antipsychotics | 13 (1.4) | 6 (50.0) | 1 (7.7) |
| Systemic corticosteroids | 13 (1.4) | 2 (16.7) | 1 (7.7) |
| Prescribing omission | 12 (1.3) | 2 (33.3) | 6 (50.0) |
| Bladder antimuscarinics | 9 (1.0) | 6 (75.0) | 1 (11.1) |
| First generation antihistamines | 8 (0.9) | 2 (28.6) | 1 (12.5) |
| Digoxin | 7 (0.8) | 2 (40.0) | 2 (28.6) |
| Prochlorperazine or metoclopramide | 7 (0.8) | 3 (50.0) | 1 (14.3) |
| Methotrexate | 4 (0.4) | 1 (33.3) | 1 (25.0) |
| First-generation calcium channel blockers | 2 (0.2) | 2 (100.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Theophylline | 1 (0.1) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
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| Deprescribing | |||
| Other | 64 (44.4) | 37 (68.5) | 10 (15.6) |
| Z-drugs | 39 (27.1) | 5 (17.9) | 11 (28.2) |
| Antihistamines | 12 (8.3) | 6 (100.0) | 6 (50.0) |
| Betahistine | 11 (7.6) | 5 (62.5) | 3 (27.3) |
| Bisphosphonates | 7 (4.9) | 5 (71.4) | 0 (0.0) |
| Statins | 6 (4.2) | 5 (100.0) | 1 (16.7) |
| Antihyperglycaemics | 5 (3.5) | 4 (100.0) | 1 (20.0) |
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| Preferred drugs | |||
| Statins | 159 (33.8) | 0 (0.0) | 2 (1.3) |
| Angiotensin II receptor blockers | 76 (16.1) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Proton pump inhibitors | 75 (15.9) | 18 (24.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors | 55 (11.7) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Beta-blockers | 30 (6.4) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Calcium channel blockers | 24 (5.1) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| ACE inhibitors | 15 (3.2) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Inhalers | 13 (2.8) | 9 (75.0) | 1 (7.7) |
| Urology drugs | 12 (2.6) | 0 (0.0) | 2 (16.7) |
| Oral anticoagulants | 10 (2.1) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
| Serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors | 2 (0.4) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) |
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*Missing addressed data refers to cases where the status of whether a prescribing issue has been addressed was not recorded.
Characteristics of patients enrolled in the PROM study and who completed patient questionnaires
| Characteristic | N (%) |
| Age, mean (SD) | 77.7 (6.4) |
| Female gender | 63 (65.6) |
| Marital status | |
| Married or cohabiting | 48 (50.0) |
| Widowed, divorced or separated | 32 (33.3) |
| Single/never married | 17 (17.7) |
| Irish nationality | 90 (93.8) |
| Education | |
| No schooling or primary only | 31 (32.3) |
| Secondary level | 32 (33.3) |
| Third level | 33 (34.4) |
| Employment | |
| Retired | 71 (74.0) |
| Employed or homemaker | 21 (21.9) |
| Other | 4 (4.2) |
| Private health insurance | 46 (47.9) |
| GMS scheme | 65 (67.7) |
| Doctor Visit Card | 19 (19.8) |
| Distance GP, median (IQR) | 2 (1–4) |
| Any GP visit in previous 12 months | 95 (99.0) |
| Number of visits, median (IQR) | 5.5 (3.5 to 8) |
| Any A&E visit in previous 12 months | 27 (28.1) |
| Number of visits, median (IQR) | 1 (1 to 2) |
| Any outpatient visit in previous 12 months | 52 (54.2) |
| Number of visits, median (IQR) | 2 (1 to 6) |
| Any inpatient stay in previous 12 months | 29 (30.2) |
| Number of stays, median (IQR) | 1 (1 to 3) |
| Number of inpatient nights, median (IQR) | 3 (1 to 8) |
A&E, accident and emergency department; GMS, General Medical Services; GP, general practitioner; PROM, patient-reported outcome measure.
Comparison of patients’ perceived level of health and attitudes towards their medicines premedication and postmedication review with the pharmacist
| Patient-reported outcome measure | N | Prereview | Postreview | Mean difference (95% CI) |
| EQ-5D-5L | ||||
| Utility score, mean | 62 | 0.728 | 0.673 | −0.056 (−0.111 to −0.002)* |
| Health states change, n (%) | 64 | |||
| No change | 8 (12.5) | |||
| Improve | 19 (29.7) | |||
| Worsen | 23 (35.9) | |||
| Mixed change | 14 (21.9) | |||
| EQ-VAS, mean | 60 | 0.641 | 0.701 | 0.061 (0.018 to 0.103)* |
| MTBQ | ||||
| Score, median (IQR) | 64 | 5.8 (0–11.5) | 5.8 (1.9–16.3) | |
| Burden categories, n (%) | 64 | |||
| No burden | 17 (26.6) | 17 (26.6) | ||
| Low burden | 30 (46.9) | 26 (40.6) | ||
| Medium burden | 11 (17.2) | 11 (17.2) | ||
| High burden | 6 (9.4) | 10 (15.6) | ||
| rPATD, mean | ||||
| Burden | 54 | 13.03 | 13.31 | 0.28 (−0.71 to 1.26) |
| Appropriateness | 52 | 17.13 | 17.23 | 0.10 (−0.73 to 0.92) |
| Concerns | 54 | 12.00 | 12.33 | 0.33 (−0.95 to 1.61) |
| Involvement | 60 | 21.33 | 21.6 | 0.27 (−0.62 to 1.15) |
| Satisfaction | 62 | 4.13 | 4.11 | −0.02 (−0.29 to 0.25) |
| Willingness | 63 | 4.54 | 4.37 | −0.17 (−0.36 to 0.01) |
*Paired t-test <0.05.
†Using an Irish value set derived from a general population representative sample.
EQ-5D-5L, EuroQol health-related quality of life five-level questionnaire; EQ-VAS, EuroQol-visual analogue scale; MTBQ, Multimorbidity Treatment Burden Questionnaire; rPATD, Revised Patients’ Attitudes Towards Deprescribing.
Cost savings (over a 12-month period) from prescribing interventions
| Cost category | Cost saving | Cost incurred |
| Cost savings for amended drugs* | €6374 | |
| Cost savings for stopped drugs | €43 681 | |
| Cost savings from interventions lacking full information | €7162 | |
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| €57 217 | |
| Cost of tests ordered | €549 | |
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| €56 669 |
*Cost of amended drugs was €31 394 before intervention and €25 019 after intervention.