| Literature DB >> 36131887 |
Laura Victoria Jedig Lech1,2, Charlotte Rossing3, Trine Rune Høgh Andersen2, Lotte Stig Nørgaard1, Anna Birna Almarsdóttir1.
Abstract
Background: Patients who transfer from the hospital back to the community are at risk of experiencing problems related to their medications. Hospital pharmacists (HPs) and community pharmacists (CPs) may play an important role and provide transitional pharmaceutical care in transition of care interventions. Objective: To describe how a pharmacist-led intervention to provide transitional pharmaceutical care for hospital discharged patients was developed, utilizing already existing pharmacist interventions in the hospital and community pharmacy.Entities:
Keywords: Community pharmacy; Hospital pharmacy; Intraprofessional collaboration; Transitional pharmaceutical care
Year: 2022 PMID: 36131887 PMCID: PMC9483769 DOI: 10.1016/j.rcsop.2022.100177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Explor Res Clin Soc Pharm ISSN: 2667-2766
Schematic overview of the methods used in the development process of the new intervention.
| Step | Method | Aim |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Literature review | To identify existing evidence on pharmaceutical care interventions in care transitions locally and internationally. |
| 2 | Focus group interviews | To identify CPs' and HPs' uncertainties and wishes toward the intervention. |
| 3 | CP and HP Workshop | To identify which tasks should be carried out as part of the new intervention and to identify uncertainties related to the new tasks. |
| 4 | Expert Group Workshop | To develop a preliminary version of the intervention based on steps 1–3 and identifying the expected outcomes of the intervention. |
| 5 | Feasibility study in hospital | To assess the ability of HPs to carry out new intervention tasks and allowing the HPs to generate experience prior to the full pilot test. |
CP = Community Pharmacist, HP = Hospital Pharmacist.
Identified evidence on the intervention components among the hospital-discharge interventions.
| Component | Evidence and related references |
|---|---|
| Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation | Heterogeneous evidence as a single intervention, but important as part of multi-faceted interventions, especially in combination with medication review, follow-up and patient counseling. |
| Pharmacist-led | Intensive pharmacological intervention component. As a stand-alone intervention it lacks evidence of any effects on mortality and readmissions. Can be combined with other intervention components that have an effect on readmissions. No evidence found for effectiveness when carried out post-discharge. |
| Collaboration with GPs | Intensive pharmacological intervention component. Typically conducted as part of interventions with a medication review component. Collaboration at the point of discharge or post-discharge. Face-to-face communication is more effective than written communication in reducing readmissions. |
| Post discharge pharmacist follow-up with the patient (by phone or home-visit) | No evidence for structured general follow-up by telephone. Should be combined with medication reconciliation, collaboration with GPs and should be tailored to patient's needs (e.g., with patient education/counseling as part of the follow-up). |
| Patient counseling/Patient education | Intensive pharmacological intervention component that should be tailored to patient needs. Can be carried out during the hospital stay, at discharge or in the community. |
GP = General Practitioner.
Conversation structure and content of the patient-CP conversation post discharge.
| I: Initial conversation (Mandatory) | |
|---|---|
| At first visit/contact with the community pharmacy post discharge | Compare medication lists in pharmacist referral and shared medication record to identify changes prior to the conversation. Obtain the patient history of the hospital stay and medication changes. Identify patient expectations of the community pharmacy. Identify the patient's goals at the community pharmacy. Identify new (if any) DRPs and solve non-complex DRPs from pharmacist referral. Refer to other pharmaceutical care services (if necessary). Assess the need for additional conversations or follow-up. Inform the patient about the plan for the next conversation. |
DRP = Drug-related problem, CP = Community Pharmacist.
Fig. 1Expected outcomes of the developed intervention and the processes implemented in the intervention structure leading to these outcomes.
DRPs = Drug-related problems.
Fig. 2Stepwise process of the new pharmacist-led intervention to provide transitional pharmaceutical care for hospital-discharged patients.
CP = Community Pharmacist, HP = Hospital Pharmacist, DRP = Drug-related problem.
| SESSION NO. | AIM |
|---|---|
| Groupwork I | Concerns |
| Groupwork II | Picking DRPs for transfer |
| Groupwork III | Referral to CP |
| Groupwork IV | Patient follow-up at the community pharmacy |
| REFERRAL TEMPLATE | |
| Hospital pharmacist initials | |
| Hospital admission cause | |
| Medication administration help | |
| Reconciled medication list at admission | |
| PHARMACIST REFERRAL | |
| Summary of the medication review | |
| Message for the community pharmacist | |
| SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION | |
| Changes to the drug treatment | |
| Interactions | |
| Kidney disease | |
| Liver disease | |