论文已发表
注册即可获取德孚的最新动态
IF 收录期刊
Authors Chen EYH, Sluggett JK, Ilomäki J, Hilmer SN, Corlis M, Picton LJ, Dean L, Alderman CP, Farinola N, Gailer J, Grigson J, Kellie AR, Putsey PJC, Yu S, Bell JS
Received 29 November 2017
Accepted for publication 7 March 2018
Published 18 May 2018 Volume 2018:13 Pages 975—986
DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/CIA.S158417
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewers approved by Dr Andrew Yee
Peer reviewer comments 3
Editor who approved publication: Dr Richard Walker
Background: Residents of aged care facilities use increasingly complex
medication regimens. Reducing unnecessary medication regimen complexity (eg, by
consolidating the number of administration times or using alternative
formulations) may benefit residents and staff.
Objective: To develop and validate an implicit tool to
facilitate medication regimen simplification in aged care facilities.
Method: A purposively selected multidisciplinary expert
panel used modified nominal group technique to identify and prioritize factors
important in determining whether a medication regimen can be simplified. The
five prioritized factors were formulated as questions, pilot-tested using
non-identifiable medication charts and refined by panel members. The final tool
was validated by two clinical pharmacists who independently applied the tool to
a random sample of 50 residents of aged care facilities to identify
opportunities for medication regimen simplification. Inter-rater agreement was
calculated using Cohen’s kappa.
Results: The Medication Regimen Simplification Guide for
Residential Aged CarE (MRS GRACE) was developed as an implicit tool comprising
of five questions about 1) the resident; 2) regulatory and safety requirements;
3) drug interactions; 4) formulation; and 5) facility and follow-up
considerations. Using MRS GRACE, two pharmacists independently simplified
medication regimens for 29/50 and 30/50 residents (Cohen’s kappa=0.38, 95% CI
0.12–0.64), respectively. Simplification was possible for all residents with
five or more administration times. Changing an administration time comprised
75% of the two pharmacists’ recommendations.
Conclusions: Using MRS GRACE, two clinical pharmacists
independently simplified over half of residents’ medication regimens with fair
agreement. MRS GRACE is a promising new tool to guide medication regimen
simplification in aged care.
Keywords: medication
therapy management, long-term care, geriatrics, drug administration, medication
regimen complexity
摘要视频链接:Development and validation of
the MRSGRACE