Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation on admission to an acute psychiatric hospital unit

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Oliveira, J
Data de Publicação: 2022
Outros Autores: Silva, TCE, Cabral, AC, Lavrador, M, Almeida, FF, Macedo, A, Saraiva, C, Fernandez Llimos, F, Caramona, MM, Figueiredo, IV, Castel Branco, MM
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: https://hdl.handle.net/10216/142774
Resumo: Background: Therapy management in patients suffering from mental health disorders is complex and the risks derived from changes or interruptions of treatment should not be ignored. Medication reconciliation in psychiatry may reduce medication errors and promote patient safety during transitions of care. Objective: To identify the influence of complementary information sources in the construction of the best possible medication history, and to ascertain the potential clinical impact of discrepancies identified in a medication reconciliation service. Methods: An observational study was conducted in an acute mental hospital unit, with a further validation in an internal medicine unit. Adult patients taking at least one medicine admitted in the unit were included. Patients/caregivers were interviewed upon admission and the information gathered was compared with hospital medical and shared electronic medical records. Once the best possible medication history was gathered, therapeutic information was reconciled against the prescription on admission to identify discrepancies. Potential clinical impact of medication errors was classified using the International Safety Classification. Results: During the study period, 148 patients were admitted, 50.7% females, mean age 54.6 years (SD=16.3). Collaboration of a caregiver was a needed in 74% of the interviews. In total, 1,147 drugs were considered to obtain patients' best possible medication history. After reconciliation, 560 clinically sound intentional discrepancies were identified and 359 discrepancies required further clarification from prescribers: 84.12% drug omission, 5.57% drug substitution, 6.96% dose change, and 3.34% dosage frequency change. Potential clinical impact of these medication discrepancies was classified as: 95 mild, 100 moderate, and 29 severe medication errors. Conclusion: About 1 in three intentional discrepancies observed in a pharmacists-led medication reconciliation service required further clarification from prescribers, being 80% of them unintentional discrepancies. Results highlight the importance of the caregiver as source of information for the psychiatric patient, the relevance of analyzing shared electronic health records until 6 months before, and the need to use hospital medical records efficiently. Additionally, 29 discrepancies were classified as errors with potentially severe clinical impact. A medication reconciliation service is concluded to be feasible and necessary in a mental health unit.
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spelling Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation on admission to an acute psychiatric hospital unitBackground: Therapy management in patients suffering from mental health disorders is complex and the risks derived from changes or interruptions of treatment should not be ignored. Medication reconciliation in psychiatry may reduce medication errors and promote patient safety during transitions of care. Objective: To identify the influence of complementary information sources in the construction of the best possible medication history, and to ascertain the potential clinical impact of discrepancies identified in a medication reconciliation service. Methods: An observational study was conducted in an acute mental hospital unit, with a further validation in an internal medicine unit. Adult patients taking at least one medicine admitted in the unit were included. Patients/caregivers were interviewed upon admission and the information gathered was compared with hospital medical and shared electronic medical records. Once the best possible medication history was gathered, therapeutic information was reconciled against the prescription on admission to identify discrepancies. Potential clinical impact of medication errors was classified using the International Safety Classification. Results: During the study period, 148 patients were admitted, 50.7% females, mean age 54.6 years (SD=16.3). Collaboration of a caregiver was a needed in 74% of the interviews. In total, 1,147 drugs were considered to obtain patients' best possible medication history. After reconciliation, 560 clinically sound intentional discrepancies were identified and 359 discrepancies required further clarification from prescribers: 84.12% drug omission, 5.57% drug substitution, 6.96% dose change, and 3.34% dosage frequency change. Potential clinical impact of these medication discrepancies was classified as: 95 mild, 100 moderate, and 29 severe medication errors. Conclusion: About 1 in three intentional discrepancies observed in a pharmacists-led medication reconciliation service required further clarification from prescribers, being 80% of them unintentional discrepancies. Results highlight the importance of the caregiver as source of information for the psychiatric patient, the relevance of analyzing shared electronic health records until 6 months before, and the need to use hospital medical records efficiently. Additionally, 29 discrepancies were classified as errors with potentially severe clinical impact. A medication reconciliation service is concluded to be feasible and necessary in a mental health unit.20222022-01-01T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleapplication/pdfhttps://hdl.handle.net/10216/142774eng1885-642X10.18549/pharmpract.2022.2.2650Oliveira, JSilva, TCECabral, ACLavrador, MAlmeida, FFMacedo, ASaraiva, CFernandez Llimos, FCaramona, MMFigueiredo, IVCastel Branco, MMinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2023-11-29T12:38:29Zoai:repositorio-aberto.up.pt:10216/142774Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-19T23:23:59.337556Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation on admission to an acute psychiatric hospital unit
title Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation on admission to an acute psychiatric hospital unit
spellingShingle Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation on admission to an acute psychiatric hospital unit
Oliveira, J
title_short Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation on admission to an acute psychiatric hospital unit
title_full Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation on admission to an acute psychiatric hospital unit
title_fullStr Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation on admission to an acute psychiatric hospital unit
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation on admission to an acute psychiatric hospital unit
title_sort Pharmacist-led medication reconciliation on admission to an acute psychiatric hospital unit
author Oliveira, J
author_facet Oliveira, J
Silva, TCE
Cabral, AC
Lavrador, M
Almeida, FF
Macedo, A
Saraiva, C
Fernandez Llimos, F
Caramona, MM
Figueiredo, IV
Castel Branco, MM
author_role author
author2 Silva, TCE
Cabral, AC
Lavrador, M
Almeida, FF
Macedo, A
Saraiva, C
Fernandez Llimos, F
Caramona, MM
Figueiredo, IV
Castel Branco, MM
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Oliveira, J
Silva, TCE
Cabral, AC
Lavrador, M
Almeida, FF
Macedo, A
Saraiva, C
Fernandez Llimos, F
Caramona, MM
Figueiredo, IV
Castel Branco, MM
description Background: Therapy management in patients suffering from mental health disorders is complex and the risks derived from changes or interruptions of treatment should not be ignored. Medication reconciliation in psychiatry may reduce medication errors and promote patient safety during transitions of care. Objective: To identify the influence of complementary information sources in the construction of the best possible medication history, and to ascertain the potential clinical impact of discrepancies identified in a medication reconciliation service. Methods: An observational study was conducted in an acute mental hospital unit, with a further validation in an internal medicine unit. Adult patients taking at least one medicine admitted in the unit were included. Patients/caregivers were interviewed upon admission and the information gathered was compared with hospital medical and shared electronic medical records. Once the best possible medication history was gathered, therapeutic information was reconciled against the prescription on admission to identify discrepancies. Potential clinical impact of medication errors was classified using the International Safety Classification. Results: During the study period, 148 patients were admitted, 50.7% females, mean age 54.6 years (SD=16.3). Collaboration of a caregiver was a needed in 74% of the interviews. In total, 1,147 drugs were considered to obtain patients' best possible medication history. After reconciliation, 560 clinically sound intentional discrepancies were identified and 359 discrepancies required further clarification from prescribers: 84.12% drug omission, 5.57% drug substitution, 6.96% dose change, and 3.34% dosage frequency change. Potential clinical impact of these medication discrepancies was classified as: 95 mild, 100 moderate, and 29 severe medication errors. Conclusion: About 1 in three intentional discrepancies observed in a pharmacists-led medication reconciliation service required further clarification from prescribers, being 80% of them unintentional discrepancies. Results highlight the importance of the caregiver as source of information for the psychiatric patient, the relevance of analyzing shared electronic health records until 6 months before, and the need to use hospital medical records efficiently. Additionally, 29 discrepancies were classified as errors with potentially severe clinical impact. A medication reconciliation service is concluded to be feasible and necessary in a mental health unit.
publishDate 2022
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2022-01-01T00:00:00Z
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10.18549/pharmpract.2022.2.2650
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