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Journal ArticleDOI

Implementation of medication review with follow-up in a Spanish community pharmacy and its achieved outcomes

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TLDR
A community pharmacy based medication review with follow-up service delivered by a trained pharmacist, has positive effects across clinical, economic, and humanistic outcomes.
Abstract
Background Despite many research studies demonstrating the benefit in clinical, economic, and humanistic outcomes of professional pharmacy services, there is a paucity of evidence when these services become incorporated into the usual practice of a community pharmacy. Objective The objective of the present study was to evaluate the clinical, economic, and humanistic impact of a pharmacist-conducted medication review with follow-up following 18 months implementation. Setting Community pharmacies in Spain. Method The study used an effectiveness-implementation hybrid design. During the follow-up, patients attended the pharmacy on a monthly basis and received the medication review with follow-up service. Main outcome measure Economic, clinical, and humanistic measures were used to assess the impact of the service. Results 132 patients received the service. During the 18 months of follow-up, 408 negative outcomes related to medicines (which are uncontrolled health problems) were identified, of which 393 were resolved. The average number of medicines used by patients significantly decreased from 6.1 (SD: 2.9) to 3.3 (SD: 2.2). A significant decrease was also observed in hospitalizations [OR = 0.31 (IC 95 % = 0.10–0.99)] and in emergency department visits [OR = 0.16 (IC 95 % = 0.05–0.55); p = 0.001]. A general trend to increase all quality of life domains was observed over time. The higher increase was observed in the construct health transition [mean increase: 30.7 (SD: 25.4)], followed by bodily pain [mean increase: 22.3 (SD: 25.4)], and general health [mean increase: 20.7 (SD: 23.7)]. Medication knowledge significantly increased in terms of aggregated domains of dose, frequency, drug indication [from 8.9 (SD: 17.5) to 87.9 (SD: 25.0)], and dose and frequency [from 9.3 (SD: 17.9) to 92.5 (22.1)]. Although a slight improvement was observed in terms of drug indication, this increase was not statistically significant. 68 out of 132 patients (51.5 %) were non-adherent to their treatment. This number decreased to 1 (0.8 %) after the follow-up [OR = 0.007 (IC 95 %: 0.001–0.053) p < 0.001]. Conclusion A community pharmacy based medication review with follow-up service delivered by a trained pharmacist, has positive effects across clinical, economic, and humanistic outcomes. These results are consistent with previous studies. Incorporating community pharmacists into the multidisciplinary team is a reliable solution to improve health care.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Medication Regimen Complexity Measured by MRCI: A Systematic Review to Identify Health Outcomes.

TL;DR: This study identified some health outcomes that may be influenced by medication regimen complexity: hospitalization, hospital readmission, and medication adherence were more prevalent, showing a significant association between MRCI increase and these health outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of the implementation process and outcomes of a professional pharmacy service in a community pharmacy setting. A case report

TL;DR: This case report can assist individual pharmacists and professional organizations interested in implementing evidence‐based services by offering an example on how to approach the implementation process in a systematic way.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pharmacist-participated medication review in different practice settings: Service or intervention? An overview of systematic reviews

TL;DR: There is considerable heterogeneity in practice settings, population, definitions, terminologies, and approach of MR as well as poor description of patient care process in the systematic reviews, which may limit the comparison, summarization and understanding of the results of MR.
Book

The Pharmacist Guide to Implementing Pharmaceutical Care

TL;DR: In this chapter, a number of concepts that will frequently be used throughout this book such as pharmaceutical care, drug-related problem, medication review and health care outcome are defined.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fostering implementation of health services research findings into practice: a consolidated framework for advancing implementation science

TL;DR: The CFIR provides a pragmatic structure for approaching complex, interacting, multi-level, and transient states of constructs in the real world by embracing, consolidating, and unifying key constructs from published implementation theories.
Journal Article

Opportunities and Responsibilities in Pharmaceutical Care.

TL;DR: Pharmacy's opportunity to mature as a profession by accepting its social responsibility to reduce preventable drug-related morbidity and mortality is explored in this article, where pharmacists and their institutions must stop looking inward and start redirecting their energies to the greater social good.
Journal ArticleDOI

Opportunities and responsibilities in pharmaceutical care.

TL;DR: Changing the focus of practice from products and biological systems to ensuring the best drug therapy and patient safety will raise pharmacy's level of responsibility and require philosophical, organizational, and functional changes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Updating the Beers criteria for potentially inappropriate medication use in older adults: results of a US consensus panel of experts.

TL;DR: The application of the Beers criteria and other tools for identifying potentially inappropriate medication use will continue to enable providers to plan interventions for decreasing both drug-related costs and overall costs and thus minimize drug- related problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effectiveness-implementation Hybrid Designs: Combining Elements of Clinical Effectiveness and Implementation Research to Enhance Public Health Impact

TL;DR: Although traditional clinical effectiveness and implementation trials are likely to remain the most common approach to moving a clinical intervention through from efficacy research to public health impact, judicious use of the proposed hybrid designs could speed the translation of research findings into routine practice.
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How many perishable medicines does a pharmacy have in Spain? cite sources?

The number of perishable medicines in a pharmacy in Spain is not specified in the provided information. No specific sources are cited.