Feasibility of Integrating Residential Care Pharmacists into Aged Care Homes to Improve Quality Use of Medicines: Study Protocol for a Non-Randomised Controlled Pilot Trial

Older adults are particularly susceptible to iatrogenic disease and communicable diseases, such as influenza. Prescribing in the residential aged care population is complex, and requires ongoing review to prevent medication misadventure. Pharmacist-led medication review is effective in reducing medi...

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Main Authors: Nicole McDerby, Mark Naunton, Alison Shield, Kasia Bail, Sam Kosari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-03-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/15/3/499
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spelling doaj-9f5695f5fb4c4ba097e13b9e95d1682b2020-11-24T22:39:52ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1660-46012018-03-0115349910.3390/ijerph15030499ijerph15030499Feasibility of Integrating Residential Care Pharmacists into Aged Care Homes to Improve Quality Use of Medicines: Study Protocol for a Non-Randomised Controlled Pilot TrialNicole McDerby0Mark Naunton1Alison Shield2Kasia Bail3Sam Kosari4Faculty of Health, Discipline of Pharmacy, University of Canberra, Bruce CBR 2617, AustraliaFaculty of Health, Discipline of Pharmacy, University of Canberra, Bruce CBR 2617, AustraliaFaculty of Health, Discipline of Pharmacy, University of Canberra, Bruce CBR 2617, AustraliaFaculty of Health, Discipline of Nursing, University of Canberra, Bruce CBR 2617, AustraliaFaculty of Health, Discipline of Pharmacy, University of Canberra, Bruce CBR 2617, AustraliaOlder adults are particularly susceptible to iatrogenic disease and communicable diseases, such as influenza. Prescribing in the residential aged care population is complex, and requires ongoing review to prevent medication misadventure. Pharmacist-led medication review is effective in reducing medication-related problems; however, current funding arrangements specifically exclude pharmacists from routinely participating in resident care. Integrating an on-site clinical pharmacist into residential care teams is an unexplored opportunity to improve quality use of medicines in this setting. The primary objective of this pilot study is to investigate the feasibility of integrating a residential care pharmacist into the existing care team. Secondary outcomes include incidence of pharmacist-led medication review, and incidence of potential medication problems based on validated prescribing measures. This is a cross-sectional, non-randomised controlled trial with a residential care pharmacist trialled at a single facility, and a parallel control site receiving usual care and services only. The results of this hypothesis-generating pilot study will be used to identify clinical outcomes and direct future larger scale investigations into the implementation of the novel residential care pharmacist model to optimise quality use of medicines in a population at high risk of medication misadventure.http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/15/3/499pharmacistresidential caremedication reviewdosage form modificationinfluenza vaccination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicole McDerby
Mark Naunton
Alison Shield
Kasia Bail
Sam Kosari
spellingShingle Nicole McDerby
Mark Naunton
Alison Shield
Kasia Bail
Sam Kosari
Feasibility of Integrating Residential Care Pharmacists into Aged Care Homes to Improve Quality Use of Medicines: Study Protocol for a Non-Randomised Controlled Pilot Trial
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
pharmacist
residential care
medication review
dosage form modification
influenza vaccination
author_facet Nicole McDerby
Mark Naunton
Alison Shield
Kasia Bail
Sam Kosari
author_sort Nicole McDerby
title Feasibility of Integrating Residential Care Pharmacists into Aged Care Homes to Improve Quality Use of Medicines: Study Protocol for a Non-Randomised Controlled Pilot Trial
title_short Feasibility of Integrating Residential Care Pharmacists into Aged Care Homes to Improve Quality Use of Medicines: Study Protocol for a Non-Randomised Controlled Pilot Trial
title_full Feasibility of Integrating Residential Care Pharmacists into Aged Care Homes to Improve Quality Use of Medicines: Study Protocol for a Non-Randomised Controlled Pilot Trial
title_fullStr Feasibility of Integrating Residential Care Pharmacists into Aged Care Homes to Improve Quality Use of Medicines: Study Protocol for a Non-Randomised Controlled Pilot Trial
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility of Integrating Residential Care Pharmacists into Aged Care Homes to Improve Quality Use of Medicines: Study Protocol for a Non-Randomised Controlled Pilot Trial
title_sort feasibility of integrating residential care pharmacists into aged care homes to improve quality use of medicines: study protocol for a non-randomised controlled pilot trial
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1660-4601
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Older adults are particularly susceptible to iatrogenic disease and communicable diseases, such as influenza. Prescribing in the residential aged care population is complex, and requires ongoing review to prevent medication misadventure. Pharmacist-led medication review is effective in reducing medication-related problems; however, current funding arrangements specifically exclude pharmacists from routinely participating in resident care. Integrating an on-site clinical pharmacist into residential care teams is an unexplored opportunity to improve quality use of medicines in this setting. The primary objective of this pilot study is to investigate the feasibility of integrating a residential care pharmacist into the existing care team. Secondary outcomes include incidence of pharmacist-led medication review, and incidence of potential medication problems based on validated prescribing measures. This is a cross-sectional, non-randomised controlled trial with a residential care pharmacist trialled at a single facility, and a parallel control site receiving usual care and services only. The results of this hypothesis-generating pilot study will be used to identify clinical outcomes and direct future larger scale investigations into the implementation of the novel residential care pharmacist model to optimise quality use of medicines in a population at high risk of medication misadventure.
topic pharmacist
residential care
medication review
dosage form modification
influenza vaccination
url http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/15/3/499
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