Pharmacists as Interprofessional Collaborators and Leaders through Clinical Pathways

Pharmacists possess pivotal competencies and expertise in developing clinical pathways (CPs). We present a tertiary care facility experience of pharmacists vis-a-vis interprofessional collaboration for designing and implementing CPs. We participated in the development of CPs as leading members of a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sherine Ismail, Mohamed Osman, Rayf Abulezz, Hani Alhamdan, K. H. Mujtaba Quadri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-03-01
Series:Pharmacy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4787/6/1/24
id doaj-5430a1eae57c4136a1be3295f21c378a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5430a1eae57c4136a1be3295f21c378a2020-11-24T21:11:42ZengMDPI AGPharmacy2226-47872018-03-01612410.3390/pharmacy6010024pharmacy6010024Pharmacists as Interprofessional Collaborators and Leaders through Clinical PathwaysSherine Ismail0Mohamed Osman1Rayf Abulezz2Hani Alhamdan3K. H. Mujtaba Quadri4King Abdullah International Medical Research Center, King Saud bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences, Pharmaceutical Care Department, King Khalid Hospital, Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs, Jeddah 21423, Saudi ArabiaTrillium Health Partners, Credit Valley Hospital, Mississauga, ON L5M 2N1, CanadaKing Abdullah International Medical Research Center, King Saud bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences, Pharmaceutical Care Department, Prince Mohammed Bin Abdulaziz Hospital, Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs, Madinah 41511, Saudi ArabiaKing Abdullah International Medical Research Center, King Saud bin Abdulaziz University for Health Sciences, Pharmaceutical Care Department, King Khalid Hospital, Ministry of National Guard Health Affairs, Jeddah 21423, Saudi ArabiaNational University of Medical Sciences, The Mall, Rawalpindi 44000, PakistanPharmacists possess pivotal competencies and expertise in developing clinical pathways (CPs). We present a tertiary care facility experience of pharmacists vis-a-vis interprofessional collaboration for designing and implementing CPs. We participated in the development of CPs as leading members of a collaborative team of healthcare professionals. We reviewed literature, aligning it with hospital formulary and institutional standards, and participated in weekly team meetings for six months. Several tools and services were adapted to guide prescribing and standardization of care through time-bound order sets. Fifteen CPs leading to admissions in medical wards were developed and integrated into Computerized Prescriber Order Entry (CPOE) sets. Tools and services included (1) reporting of creatinine clearance to guide optimum dosing; (2) advisory flags for dosing and infusion rates; (3) piloting of medication reconciliation and counseling services before discharge were initiated; (4) Arabic drug leaflets were designed to educate patients; and (5) five CPs were included in pragmatic randomized control trials with a clinical pharmacist as co-investigator. Clinical pharmacists conducted continuous orientation to various healthcare professionals throughout the process. CPs provide unique opportunities for establishing and evaluating patient-centered pharmaceutical services and allow clinical pharmacists to demonstrate interprofessional leadership in collaboration with multidisciplinary teams.http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4787/6/1/24clinical pathwayspharmacistsclinical pharmacistsinterprofessional collaborationintegrated care and patient-centered outcomes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sherine Ismail
Mohamed Osman
Rayf Abulezz
Hani Alhamdan
K. H. Mujtaba Quadri
spellingShingle Sherine Ismail
Mohamed Osman
Rayf Abulezz
Hani Alhamdan
K. H. Mujtaba Quadri
Pharmacists as Interprofessional Collaborators and Leaders through Clinical Pathways
Pharmacy
clinical pathways
pharmacists
clinical pharmacists
interprofessional collaboration
integrated care and patient-centered outcomes
author_facet Sherine Ismail
Mohamed Osman
Rayf Abulezz
Hani Alhamdan
K. H. Mujtaba Quadri
author_sort Sherine Ismail
title Pharmacists as Interprofessional Collaborators and Leaders through Clinical Pathways
title_short Pharmacists as Interprofessional Collaborators and Leaders through Clinical Pathways
title_full Pharmacists as Interprofessional Collaborators and Leaders through Clinical Pathways
title_fullStr Pharmacists as Interprofessional Collaborators and Leaders through Clinical Pathways
title_full_unstemmed Pharmacists as Interprofessional Collaborators and Leaders through Clinical Pathways
title_sort pharmacists as interprofessional collaborators and leaders through clinical pathways
publisher MDPI AG
series Pharmacy
issn 2226-4787
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Pharmacists possess pivotal competencies and expertise in developing clinical pathways (CPs). We present a tertiary care facility experience of pharmacists vis-a-vis interprofessional collaboration for designing and implementing CPs. We participated in the development of CPs as leading members of a collaborative team of healthcare professionals. We reviewed literature, aligning it with hospital formulary and institutional standards, and participated in weekly team meetings for six months. Several tools and services were adapted to guide prescribing and standardization of care through time-bound order sets. Fifteen CPs leading to admissions in medical wards were developed and integrated into Computerized Prescriber Order Entry (CPOE) sets. Tools and services included (1) reporting of creatinine clearance to guide optimum dosing; (2) advisory flags for dosing and infusion rates; (3) piloting of medication reconciliation and counseling services before discharge were initiated; (4) Arabic drug leaflets were designed to educate patients; and (5) five CPs were included in pragmatic randomized control trials with a clinical pharmacist as co-investigator. Clinical pharmacists conducted continuous orientation to various healthcare professionals throughout the process. CPs provide unique opportunities for establishing and evaluating patient-centered pharmaceutical services and allow clinical pharmacists to demonstrate interprofessional leadership in collaboration with multidisciplinary teams.
topic clinical pathways
pharmacists
clinical pharmacists
interprofessional collaboration
integrated care and patient-centered outcomes
url http://www.mdpi.com/2226-4787/6/1/24
work_keys_str_mv AT sherineismail pharmacistsasinterprofessionalcollaboratorsandleadersthroughclinicalpathways
AT mohamedosman pharmacistsasinterprofessionalcollaboratorsandleadersthroughclinicalpathways
AT rayfabulezz pharmacistsasinterprofessionalcollaboratorsandleadersthroughclinicalpathways
AT hanialhamdan pharmacistsasinterprofessionalcollaboratorsandleadersthroughclinicalpathways
AT khmujtabaquadri pharmacistsasinterprofessionalcollaboratorsandleadersthroughclinicalpathways
_version_ 1716753034123411456