Identification of drug-related problems by a clinical pharmacist in addition to computerized alerts

Autor: Rianne J. Zaal, Patricia M. L. A. van den Bemt, Jan A. Roukema, Marjolijn Duisenberg-van Essenberg, Mark M P M Jansen, Cees C Tijssen
Přispěvatelé: Pharmacy, Psychiatry, Medical and Clinical Psychology
Rok vydání: 2013
Předmět:
Male
Risk
medicine.medical_specialty
Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
health care facilities
manpower
and services

education
MEDLINE
Psychological intervention
Pharmaceutical Science
Pharmacy
Toxicology
Pharmacists
Clinical decision support system
Models
Biological

Computerized physician order entry
health services administration
medicine
Humans
Medication Errors
Pharmacology (medical)
Hospitals
Teaching

Referral and Consultation
Aged
Netherlands
Pharmacology
Aged
80 and over

business.industry
Middle Aged
Decision Support Systems
Clinical

Drug Therapy
Computer-Assisted

Clinical pharmacy
Pharmaceutical care
Neurology
Emergency medicine
Pharmacology
Clinical

Workforce
Observational study
Female
Drug Monitoring
business
Pharmacy Service
Hospital

Surgery Department
Hospital

Follow-Up Studies
Zdroj: International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy, 35(5), 753-762. Springer Netherlands
International Journal Clinical Pharmacy, 35(5), 753-762. Springer Netherlands
ISSN: 1573-739X
2210-7703
2210-7711
Popis: Background Both clinical pharmacists and computerized physician order entry systems with clinical decision support (CPOE/CDSS) can reduce drug-related problems (DRPs). However, the contribution of a clinical pharmacist in addition to CPOE/CDSS has not been established in a prospective study. Objective To determine which DRPs can be identified by a clinical pharmacist in a setting with routine use of CPOE/CDSS. Setting Two surgical and two neurological wards in St. Elisabeth hospital, a 600-bed teaching hospital in the Netherlands. Methods In this observational prospective follow-up study a clinical pharmacist reviewed the pharmacotherapy of patients admitted to surgical and neurological wards to identify DRPs (i.e. medication errors and adverse drug events) and discussed the relevance of identified problems and interventions to resolve these with the responsible physician. Acceptance of the proposed interventions and the presence of alerts in CPOE/CDSS were assessed. Primary outcome was the proportion of DRPs identified by the clinical pharmacist that also triggered a CPOE/CDSS alert. Differences between the DRPs that generated an alert and those that did not were expressed as relative risks or analyzed with Chi square statistics or Mann–Whitney U tests. Main outcome measure The proportion of drug-related problems identified by the clinical pharmacist that also generated an alert in the CPOE/CDSS. Results During 1206 medication reviews, 442 potential DRPs were identified; 286 (65 %) DRPs were considered relevant and 247 (56 %) of the proposed interventions were accepted. A CPOE/CDSS alert was generated for 35 (8 %) of the DRPs the clinical pharmacist identified. The only difference between problems that triggered an alert and those that did not was the class of the DRP (indication 23 vs. 36 %, effectiveness 23 vs. 13 %, safety 23 vs. 10 % and pharmaceutical care issues 31 vs. 42 %, p = 0.02). CPOE/CDSS triggered 623 additional alerts that were handled during routine pharmacy service. Conclusions As most DRPs identified by a clinical pharmacist were not detected in daily clinical practice by CPOE/CDSS, a clinical pharmacist contributes to reducing DRPs. The sensitivity of CPOE/CDSS to detect certain classes of problems should be optimized.Keywords: Adverse drug events, Clinical decision support system, Clinical pharmacist
Databáze: OpenAIRE