Effectiveness and safety of physician–pharmacist collaborative care for rheumatoid arthritis patients: The Changi General Hospital’s experience

Background: Increasing demand for follow-up of rheumatoid arthritis has encouraged pharmacists to collaborate with physicians to assist with patient care. Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness and safety of the collaborative care model in a rheumatoid arthritis clinic. Met...

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Main Authors: Elena Meishan Lee, Archana Ramaswamy Vasudevan, Ian Yew Jin Wee, Serene Dingju Yeow, Vinh Thuc Uyen Dinh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-09-01
Series:Proceedings of Singapore Healthcare
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2010105819839078
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spelling doaj-979ee62ac0254313803b405fdce49da02020-11-25T03:26:54ZengSAGE PublishingProceedings of Singapore Healthcare2010-10582059-23292019-09-012810.1177/2010105819839078Effectiveness and safety of physician–pharmacist collaborative care for rheumatoid arthritis patients: The Changi General Hospital’s experienceElena Meishan Lee0Archana Ramaswamy Vasudevan1Ian Yew Jin Wee2Serene Dingju Yeow3Vinh Thuc Uyen Dinh4Department of Pharmacy, Changi General Hospital, SingaporeRheumatology Service, Department of General Medicine, Changi General HospitalDepartment of Pharmacy, Changi General Hospital, SingaporeDepartment of Pharmacy, Changi General Hospital, SingaporeDepartment of Pharmacy, Changi General Hospital, SingaporeBackground: Increasing demand for follow-up of rheumatoid arthritis has encouraged pharmacists to collaborate with physicians to assist with patient care. Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness and safety of the collaborative care model in a rheumatoid arthritis clinic. Methods: We performed a retrospective review of patient case notes and medication records from March 2013 to February 2016. The effectiveness and safety of collaborative care was examined in pre-implementation (standard care) versus post-implementation (collaborative care) cohorts. All patients were assessed for 12 months. Effectiveness of clinic was measured using the percentage of patients that achieved optimal doses of non-biologic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (nb-DMARDs). Clinic safety performance was evaluated based on the percentage of patients in each cohort that achieved compliance to in-house hospital guidelines on nb-DMARD monitoring. Other clinic safety factors monitored included the incidence and characteristics of nb-DMARD-associated adverse drug events. Results: Thirty-eight patients who had received standard care and collaborative care were reviewed. More patients receiving collaborative care achieved nb-DMARD dose optimization within a year of initiation of therapy (68.4% vs 39.5%; p -value < 0.05). Compliance to safety recommendations from hospital guidelines on nb-DMARD monitoring was significantly higher in the collaborative care group (70.6% vs 44.1%; p -value < 0.05). Collaborative care resulted in a higher incidence of nb-DMARD-associated adverse drug events being detected (26.3% vs 18.4%; p -value < 0.05). The most common adverse drug events were gastrointestinal (29.4%), dermatological (17.6%), and hematologic (17.6%), the majority being mild in severity. Conclusion: Collaborative rheumatoid arthritis care contributed to improvements in nb-DMARD dose optimization, compliance to hospital guidelines on monitoring, and the detection of nb-DMARD-related adverse drug events.https://doi.org/10.1177/2010105819839078
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elena Meishan Lee
Archana Ramaswamy Vasudevan
Ian Yew Jin Wee
Serene Dingju Yeow
Vinh Thuc Uyen Dinh
spellingShingle Elena Meishan Lee
Archana Ramaswamy Vasudevan
Ian Yew Jin Wee
Serene Dingju Yeow
Vinh Thuc Uyen Dinh
Effectiveness and safety of physician–pharmacist collaborative care for rheumatoid arthritis patients: The Changi General Hospital’s experience
Proceedings of Singapore Healthcare
author_facet Elena Meishan Lee
Archana Ramaswamy Vasudevan
Ian Yew Jin Wee
Serene Dingju Yeow
Vinh Thuc Uyen Dinh
author_sort Elena Meishan Lee
title Effectiveness and safety of physician–pharmacist collaborative care for rheumatoid arthritis patients: The Changi General Hospital’s experience
title_short Effectiveness and safety of physician–pharmacist collaborative care for rheumatoid arthritis patients: The Changi General Hospital’s experience
title_full Effectiveness and safety of physician–pharmacist collaborative care for rheumatoid arthritis patients: The Changi General Hospital’s experience
title_fullStr Effectiveness and safety of physician–pharmacist collaborative care for rheumatoid arthritis patients: The Changi General Hospital’s experience
title_full_unstemmed Effectiveness and safety of physician–pharmacist collaborative care for rheumatoid arthritis patients: The Changi General Hospital’s experience
title_sort effectiveness and safety of physician–pharmacist collaborative care for rheumatoid arthritis patients: the changi general hospital’s experience
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Proceedings of Singapore Healthcare
issn 2010-1058
2059-2329
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Background: Increasing demand for follow-up of rheumatoid arthritis has encouraged pharmacists to collaborate with physicians to assist with patient care. Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the effectiveness and safety of the collaborative care model in a rheumatoid arthritis clinic. Methods: We performed a retrospective review of patient case notes and medication records from March 2013 to February 2016. The effectiveness and safety of collaborative care was examined in pre-implementation (standard care) versus post-implementation (collaborative care) cohorts. All patients were assessed for 12 months. Effectiveness of clinic was measured using the percentage of patients that achieved optimal doses of non-biologic disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (nb-DMARDs). Clinic safety performance was evaluated based on the percentage of patients in each cohort that achieved compliance to in-house hospital guidelines on nb-DMARD monitoring. Other clinic safety factors monitored included the incidence and characteristics of nb-DMARD-associated adverse drug events. Results: Thirty-eight patients who had received standard care and collaborative care were reviewed. More patients receiving collaborative care achieved nb-DMARD dose optimization within a year of initiation of therapy (68.4% vs 39.5%; p -value < 0.05). Compliance to safety recommendations from hospital guidelines on nb-DMARD monitoring was significantly higher in the collaborative care group (70.6% vs 44.1%; p -value < 0.05). Collaborative care resulted in a higher incidence of nb-DMARD-associated adverse drug events being detected (26.3% vs 18.4%; p -value < 0.05). The most common adverse drug events were gastrointestinal (29.4%), dermatological (17.6%), and hematologic (17.6%), the majority being mild in severity. Conclusion: Collaborative rheumatoid arthritis care contributed to improvements in nb-DMARD dose optimization, compliance to hospital guidelines on monitoring, and the detection of nb-DMARD-related adverse drug events.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2010105819839078
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