Objective:To explore existing practices and challenges in the delivery of geriatric home medication review(HMR).The study was part of a larger study aimed to offer solution to expand the range of geriatric HMR.Methods...Objective:To explore existing practices and challenges in the delivery of geriatric home medication review(HMR).The study was part of a larger study aimed to offer solution to expand the range of geriatric HMR.Methods:This study employed qualitative exploratory design through semi-structured individual in-depth interviews with the public pharmacists involved in the delivery of geriatric HMR at public hospitals.The purpose of the interviews was to explore challenges faced by them in the delivery of geriatric HMR.Results:Based on the emerging themes from the qualitative data,the study reveals that geriatric HMR in Malaysia is integrated as part of multidisciplinary home care visits,encompassing a diverse patient population with various healthcare needs.However,it faces challenges such as the lack of outcome monitoring,formal training,and workforce constraints.Despite these hurdles,there is a pressing need for the expansion of this service to better serve the community,and collaboration with community pharmacists holds potential to broaden its scope.Ultimately,the findings suggest that pharmacist-led HMR is both warranted and feasible within the Malaysian healthcare context.In order to optimize medicine-use among older people living in the community,approaches for expanding geriatric HMR services in Malaysia must be developed.Conclusions:This study holds profound implications as it attempts to illuminate policy makers in developing countries,enabling them to formulate effective HMR plans.By considering the challenges highlighted within this research,policy makers can design a comprehensive HMR service that caters adeptly to the healthcare needs of the mass population.展开更多
Patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) can have chemotherapy with oxaliplatin postoperatively. Oxaliplatin can cause acute and chronic neurotoxicity. It is important to be aware of neurotoxic side effects so they can b...Patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) can have chemotherapy with oxaliplatin postoperatively. Oxaliplatin can cause acute and chronic neurotoxicity. It is important to be aware of neurotoxic side effects so they can be documented and action taken at an early stage. The study aimed to identify and explore neurotoxic side effects documented in the medical records of patients with colorectal cancer treated with oxaliplatin-based adjuvant chemotherapy. Data in this study were medical records;presenting documentation about patients treated at the University Hospital in the south of Sweden between 2009 and 2010. A summative content analysis approach was used to explore the neurotoxic side effects. Identification and quantification of the content of medical records were carried out by using a study-specific protocol. “Cold sensitivity” and “tingling in the hands” were the most frequently documented neurotoxicity-related terms in the medical records. This identification was followed by interpretation. Three categories were identified in the interpretive part of the study: acute, chronic, and degree of neurotoxicity. The results show the importance of awareness of neurotoxic side effects so that they can be documented and action taken at an early stage. The documentation could be more reliable if patient-reported structured measurements were used, combined with free descriptions in the medical records. Being able to follow the progression of the symptoms during and after treatment would improve patient’s safety and also quality of life. The protocol that we developed and used in this review of medical records may be helpful to structure the documentation in the electronic system for documentation of neurotoxicity side effects.展开更多
Background: This paper reports findings from a literature review undertaken to assess the current evidence base for clinical medication review and falls in older people. This forms part of a larger, organisational sup...Background: This paper reports findings from a literature review undertaken to assess the current evidence base for clinical medication review and falls in older people. This forms part of a larger, organisational supported project design work-stream, where the objectives are to define the operational details for clinical medication review as part of multi-factorial assessment for elderly fallers in the community. Patients will be identified and targeted through an integrated care pathway mapping and elderly patient care screening service. Objective: A review of national and best practice guidance to help our understanding of how clinical medication review could be optimised. Methods: A PubMed database search was undertaken with search terms including “elderly” and “falls” and “medicines” followed by study of relevant publications in English and including cited referenced publications within selected papers. Results: Our findings were that both medication over-use and under-use in the elderly occur frequently and can be harmful. Many drugs commonly used by older persons have not been systematically studied as risk factors for falls. The screening tool of older people’s prescriptions (STOPP) and screening tool to alert to right treatment (START), validated for assessment of potentially inappropriate prescribing in the elderly, offer the possibility of provision of a structured clinical medication review to patients, with a need for more research on the impact of the STOPP START interventions on both the rates of falls and risk of falls in the elderly.展开更多
Background:The association between multimorbidities and polypharmacy among elderly individuals is well documented,and polypharmacy has been shown to increase the risk of adverse drug events(ADEs).However,little inform...Background:The association between multimorbidities and polypharmacy among elderly individuals is well documented,and polypharmacy has been shown to increase the risk of adverse drug events(ADEs).However,little information is available about the risks associated with the lifelong use of medications to treat chronic multimorbidities.Objective:To determine the prevalence and nature of high-risk prescriptions among primary-care patients with chronic multimorbidities.Methods:We studied a weighted stratified random sample of 105 prescriptions for different patients with chronic multimorbidities taken from the Polychrome database established using information from the French primary-care record database(Observatoire de la Médecine Générale).A medication review was conducted to identify contra-indications and potential drug-drug interactions for each prescription.Results:Contra-indications were identified for 60(57.1%)prescriptions,potential drug-drug interactions for 70(66.7%),absolute contra-indications for 9(8.6%),and inadvisable drug combinations for 11(10.5%).In all,19(18.1%)different patients were at risk for major ADEs.Cardiovascular and nervous-system drugs contributed 66.2% of contra-indications and 69.3% of potential drug-drug interactions.Conclusions:This exploratory study confirms the high prevalence and potential seriousness of prescriptions at risk for ADEs in a population of primary-care patients with chronic multimorbidities.The high prevalence of interactions involving the cardiovascular and nervous systems indicates that efforts to improve prescription practices should target these two categories of conditions and drugs in patients with chronic multimorbidities.展开更多
基金funded by the Taylor’s University Flagship Research Grant(TUFR/2017/002/03).
文摘Objective:To explore existing practices and challenges in the delivery of geriatric home medication review(HMR).The study was part of a larger study aimed to offer solution to expand the range of geriatric HMR.Methods:This study employed qualitative exploratory design through semi-structured individual in-depth interviews with the public pharmacists involved in the delivery of geriatric HMR at public hospitals.The purpose of the interviews was to explore challenges faced by them in the delivery of geriatric HMR.Results:Based on the emerging themes from the qualitative data,the study reveals that geriatric HMR in Malaysia is integrated as part of multidisciplinary home care visits,encompassing a diverse patient population with various healthcare needs.However,it faces challenges such as the lack of outcome monitoring,formal training,and workforce constraints.Despite these hurdles,there is a pressing need for the expansion of this service to better serve the community,and collaboration with community pharmacists holds potential to broaden its scope.Ultimately,the findings suggest that pharmacist-led HMR is both warranted and feasible within the Malaysian healthcare context.In order to optimize medicine-use among older people living in the community,approaches for expanding geriatric HMR services in Malaysia must be developed.Conclusions:This study holds profound implications as it attempts to illuminate policy makers in developing countries,enabling them to formulate effective HMR plans.By considering the challenges highlighted within this research,policy makers can design a comprehensive HMR service that caters adeptly to the healthcare needs of the mass population.
基金Linköping University Hospital Swedish Society of Nursing
文摘Patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) can have chemotherapy with oxaliplatin postoperatively. Oxaliplatin can cause acute and chronic neurotoxicity. It is important to be aware of neurotoxic side effects so they can be documented and action taken at an early stage. The study aimed to identify and explore neurotoxic side effects documented in the medical records of patients with colorectal cancer treated with oxaliplatin-based adjuvant chemotherapy. Data in this study were medical records;presenting documentation about patients treated at the University Hospital in the south of Sweden between 2009 and 2010. A summative content analysis approach was used to explore the neurotoxic side effects. Identification and quantification of the content of medical records were carried out by using a study-specific protocol. “Cold sensitivity” and “tingling in the hands” were the most frequently documented neurotoxicity-related terms in the medical records. This identification was followed by interpretation. Three categories were identified in the interpretive part of the study: acute, chronic, and degree of neurotoxicity. The results show the importance of awareness of neurotoxic side effects so that they can be documented and action taken at an early stage. The documentation could be more reliable if patient-reported structured measurements were used, combined with free descriptions in the medical records. Being able to follow the progression of the symptoms during and after treatment would improve patient’s safety and also quality of life. The protocol that we developed and used in this review of medical records may be helpful to structure the documentation in the electronic system for documentation of neurotoxicity side effects.
文摘Background: This paper reports findings from a literature review undertaken to assess the current evidence base for clinical medication review and falls in older people. This forms part of a larger, organisational supported project design work-stream, where the objectives are to define the operational details for clinical medication review as part of multi-factorial assessment for elderly fallers in the community. Patients will be identified and targeted through an integrated care pathway mapping and elderly patient care screening service. Objective: A review of national and best practice guidance to help our understanding of how clinical medication review could be optimised. Methods: A PubMed database search was undertaken with search terms including “elderly” and “falls” and “medicines” followed by study of relevant publications in English and including cited referenced publications within selected papers. Results: Our findings were that both medication over-use and under-use in the elderly occur frequently and can be harmful. Many drugs commonly used by older persons have not been systematically studied as risk factors for falls. The screening tool of older people’s prescriptions (STOPP) and screening tool to alert to right treatment (START), validated for assessment of potentially inappropriate prescribing in the elderly, offer the possibility of provision of a structured clinical medication review to patients, with a need for more research on the impact of the STOPP START interventions on both the rates of falls and risk of falls in the elderly.
文摘Background:The association between multimorbidities and polypharmacy among elderly individuals is well documented,and polypharmacy has been shown to increase the risk of adverse drug events(ADEs).However,little information is available about the risks associated with the lifelong use of medications to treat chronic multimorbidities.Objective:To determine the prevalence and nature of high-risk prescriptions among primary-care patients with chronic multimorbidities.Methods:We studied a weighted stratified random sample of 105 prescriptions for different patients with chronic multimorbidities taken from the Polychrome database established using information from the French primary-care record database(Observatoire de la Médecine Générale).A medication review was conducted to identify contra-indications and potential drug-drug interactions for each prescription.Results:Contra-indications were identified for 60(57.1%)prescriptions,potential drug-drug interactions for 70(66.7%),absolute contra-indications for 9(8.6%),and inadvisable drug combinations for 11(10.5%).In all,19(18.1%)different patients were at risk for major ADEs.Cardiovascular and nervous-system drugs contributed 66.2% of contra-indications and 69.3% of potential drug-drug interactions.Conclusions:This exploratory study confirms the high prevalence and potential seriousness of prescriptions at risk for ADEs in a population of primary-care patients with chronic multimorbidities.The high prevalence of interactions involving the cardiovascular and nervous systems indicates that efforts to improve prescription practices should target these two categories of conditions and drugs in patients with chronic multimorbidities.