Pharmacists' attitudes towards a pharmaceutical assessment screening tool to help prioritise pharmaceutical care in a UK hospital
Autor: | Katherine Saxby, Steven D Williams, John McGuinness, Ruth Murdoch, Douglas Steinke |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Response rate (survey)
medicine.medical_specialty Quality management business.industry education Microsoft excel Alternative medicine Patient Acuity 030226 pharmacology & pharmacy humanities 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Pharmaceutical care Nursing Medicine Screening tool Original Article 030212 general & internal medicine General Pharmacology Toxicology and Pharmaceutics business Statistic |
Zdroj: | Saxby, K J E, Murdoch, R, McGuinness, J, Steinke, D & Williams, S 2017, ' Pharmacists’ attitudes towards a pharmaceutical assessment screening tool to help prioritise pharmaceutical care in a UK hospital ', European Journal of Hospital Pharmacy . https://doi.org/10.1136/ejhpharm-2016-001074 |
ISSN: | 2047-9964 |
DOI: | 10.1136/ejhpharm-2016-001074 |
Popis: | ObjectiveTo establish the thoughts of pharmacists using the pharmaceutical assessment screening tool (PAST) when assigning a patient acuity level and establish other decision factors. A patient acuity level is a pharmaceutical assessment of a patient (lowest =1 to highest =3), higher patient acuity levels highlight the requirement for a more intensive pharmaceutical input to reduce potential harm.MethodA questionnaire designed to elicit attitudes about the pharmaceutical assessment screening tool was circulated to 32 pharmacists working in a 900 bed UK university teaching hospital. Respondents were asked to document what patient acuity level they would assign for six theoretical patient cases with an explanation. The data collected was analysed using Microsoft Excel® and further analysis was undertaken about the strength of agreement to PAST using the kappa statistic (Ƙ) using Stata v12 (StataCorp, TX., USA).ResultsThe questionnaire was completed by 28/32 pharmacists (87.5% response rate). The mean confidence (SD) for assigning a patient acuity level (PAL) was 81% (±20%). 26/28 pharmacists (93%) agreed or strongly agreed that professional judgement guided them most when allocating a PAL. The PAL assigned to the case studies presented both over and under estimations compared to the guidance but overall the strength of agreement was considered to be “fair” (Ƙ =0.202).ConclusionPharmacists feel confident about using a pharmaceutical assessment screening tool to help them assign a patient acuity level. However the use of professional judgement to assign an acuity level overrides any predicted level from PAST. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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