Limited effect of structured medication report as the only intervention at discharge from hospital

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL PHARMACY-SCIENCE AND PRACTICE(2019)

引用 2|浏览1
暂无评分
摘要
Objective To investigate whether a structured medication report at discharge from the hospital could reduce the number of medication discrepancies in primary care. Method The study was performed as an open, randomised controlled study including patients transferred from one hospital in Norway to nursing home or home care. Both groups received epicrisis on discharge. In addition, the intervention group received a structured medication report. After discharge, the medication list in primary care service was compared with the list at discharge and medication discrepancies identified. In addition, these medication lists were retrospectively compared with the lists prior to admission to the hospital and at admission to hospital. A questionnaire on time spent and quality of the medication information was filled in by nurses in primary care. Results Medication discrepancies were found for 72% (26) of the patients in the intervention group and 76% (42) in the control group (P= 0.918). Most common was drugs omitted or committed to the medication lists in primary care service. Typically, the committed drugs in primary care were omitted drugs after admission to the hospital. Nurses used significantly less time (66%) obtaining medication information in the intervention group (P= 0.041). Conclusions Structured medication report as the only intervention did not reduce the medication discrepancies after discharge from hospital. There is a need for reconciliation at admission to ensure the quality of the medication report. Structured medication report resulted in the nurses spending less time on collecting medication information in primary care service.
更多
查看译文
关键词
discharge from hospital,medication discrepancies,medication list,medication reconciliation,primary care
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要