TY - DATA T1 - Pharmacist-led interventions to improve medication use and safety in older people who access hospital inpatient and aged care services PY - 2017/02/16 AU - Elliott, Rohan UR - https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/thesis/Pharmacist-led_interventions_to_improve_medication_use_and_safety_in_older_people_who_access_hospital_inpatient_and_aged_care_services/4657783 DO - 10.4225/03/58a52202c055f KW - ethesis-20140923-080929 KW - Medication management processes KW - thesis(doctorate) KW - monash:130713 KW - Medication-related problems KW - Aged care services KW - 1959.1/981123 KW - Hospitalisation KW - 2014 KW - Restricted access N2 - Older people (over 65 years) are at increased risk of medication-related problems (MRPs) and adverse medication events compared with younger adults. Within the older population, there is a very high risk subgroup: those who access hospital inpatient and aged care services. They are, on average, at the extreme end of age (over 80 years), with high disease-burden (more than four comorbidities) and high medication use (more than eight medications); they are often frail and medically unstable. The research presented in this thesis comes from three projects that explored MRPs and deficiencies in medication management processes in this high risk subgroup, and investigated the impact of pharmacist-led interventions to improve medication use and safety. The projects focused on areas in which there has been little research previously conducted in Australia or internationally. Project 1 (medication regimen complexity in hospitalised older people) explored the impact of hospitalisation on the complexity of older patients' medication regimens, and strategies to reduce complexity prior to hospital discharge. In a prospective study of 186 older patients admitted to general medicine and aged care wards, it was observed that multiple medication changes were made during hospitalisation, and the complexity of medication regimens increased by 32%. Most medication regimens had potential to be simplified without altering the therapeutic intent. Therefore an intervention was designed and tested. During the intervention period, hospital pharmacists who had received training in regimen simplification reviewed 205 patients' medications prior to discharge, in consultation with hospital doctors, to identify ways to reduce complexity. The outcome was that the increase in regimen complexity between admission and discharge was significantly smaller following the intervention. The difference in regimen IV Abstract complexity was equivalent to prescribing at least one less medication, and up to two or three medications for some patients. Barriers to reducing regimen complexity were identified, including lack of pharmacist time to review and simplify medication regimens, and nonacceptance by patients or doctors of some pharmacist recommendations. Project 2 (continuity of medication management after discharge from hospital to residential care) explored gaps in the continuity of medication management when patients were discharged to residential care facilities (RCF), and evaluated strategies to improve the continuity of care. In a prospective observational study of 202 patients, 20% were exposed to a medication administration error in the 24 hours after hospital discharge, and 33% required a locum doctor to write a medication chart at the RCF. To address these issues, a pharmacist-prepared 7-day interim residential care medication administration chart was developed, with patient and medication data auto-populated onto the chart from hospital pharmacy dispensing software. The impact of the chart on medication administration errors and use of locum doctors after hospital discharge was investigated in a prospective pre- and post-intervention study (n = 428 patients). Provision of the chart reduced the incidence of missed and delayed medication doses from 18% to 2% and the use of locum medical services from 33% to II%. RCF nurses and doctors were highly satisfied with the chart. Provision of interim medication charts by hospital pharmacists was reliable and accurate, with more than 95% of patients receiving one on discharge, and a 1% discrepancy rate between the charts and discharge prescriptions. Project 3 (medication-related problems in people referred to aged care outpatient clinics and assessment services) explored the accuracy of medication histories, the prevalence of MRPs, and the impact of pharmacist-conducted medication reviews in 46 patients referred to aged care outpatient clinics in a cross-sectional study, and 80 patients referred to an aged care assessment team (ACAT) in a randomised comparative study. A tool for assessing the risk associated with unresolved MRPs was developed and validated. Despite deteriorating health and functional decline, fewer than 7% of patients had received a Home Medicines Review (HMR) in the 12 months prior to referral, in both studies. Medication histories recorded by aged care clinicians were usually inaccurate, and many MRPs were not identified prior to pharmacist-conducted reviews. In the ACAT study, referral of patients to their general practitioner for a HMR resulted in 18% receiving a pharmacist-conducted medication review within 4 weeks; referral to a hospital outreach pharmacist resulted in 90% receiving a medication review within 4 weeks. A median of three unresolved MRPs per patient were identified via hospital outreach pharmacist review; more than three-quarters of these were rated as having moderate, high or extreme risk of adverse outcome if not addressed. Just over 50% of pharmacist recommendations led to changes to patients' medication management. General practitioners and aged care clinicians reported that pharmacist-conducted medication reviews were useful. Together, these three projects have identified a range of problems with medication use and safety in a very old, high-risk subset of the Australian population. The projects provide evidence to guide implementation of strategies to improve medication use in this population. Pharmacist-led interventions resulted in significant improvements in various aspects of medication management. Although the impact on long-term clinical outcomes was not assessed, the MRPs that were prevented or resolved were assessed by experts as having significant risk of adverse outcomes if not addressed, and have been associated with adverse outcomes in previous studies. Nevertheless, further studies are needed to confirm that the interventions described lead to improved clinical outcomes. In conclusion, complex medication regimens on discharge from hospital, medication errors after discharge from hospital to RCFs, and MRPs in patients referred to hospital-based ambulatory aged care services are common. Pharmacist-led interventions can improve medication use and safety. ER -