No registrations found.
ID
Source
Brief title
Health condition
Adverse Drug Events
Sponsors and support
Participating hospitals:
- Onze lieve Vrouwe Gasthuis Amsterdam
- Diakonessenhuis Utrecht
Intervention
Outcome measures
Primary outcome
Number of preventable ADE's per 100 admissions.
Secondary outcome
1. Severity of all preventable ADE's;
2. Number and clinical relevance of pharmacy interventions;
3. Lenght of hospital stay;
4. Number of readmissions within 3 months after admission;
5. Costs;
6. Quality of life within 3 months after admission;
7. Additional quality of pharmaceutical care.
Background summary
Rationale:
Injuries caused by medication errors are widely agreed to be a problem in hospitalized patients. These injuries are known as preventable Adverse Drug Events (pADE’s). Also in The Netherlands is stated that hundreds of people die each year as a result of pADE’s. Surgical patients are especially at risk for these ADEs because of the frequent transfer moments within the hospital and subsequent changes in medication.
International studies have shown that hospital pharmacists can effectively reduce pADE’s when they actively participate on the ward. This concept is known as ‘ward-based pharmacy’. The activities consist of close review of medication on admission, active participation in rounding teams and counselling patients at discharge. The applicability of these findings to the Dutch setting is unknown as our health care system is differently organized. In The Netherlands hospital pharmacists work from a central pharmacy and they are scarce and more costly.
Objective:
The aim of the proposed study is to establish whether the active participation of a clinical pharmacy team on the surgical ward reduces pADE's cost-effectively in the Dutch setting.
Design:
Three hospitals will participate. First, baseline assessments (n=480) will be made in each hospital at the surgical wards. Then, in each centre, one unit will randomly be assigned (one-time randomisation) as experimental unit (n= 482) receiving ward-based pharmacy, whereas the other unit will serve as control unit (n= 482) receiving usual pharmaceutical care.
Population:
Consecutive patients admitted to a surgical ward for elective surgery with an expected length of stay of more than 2 days.
Intervention:
The ward-based pharmacy team assesses medication reconciliation at admission and discharge and daily optimizes the patient medication during hospital stay. Patients admitted to control units receive standard pharmaceutical care.
Outcome measures:
The number of pADE’s per 100 admissions in experimental unit patients will be compared to that of control unit patients, corrected for differences at baseline. Besides presence, also the severity of the pADE’s will be determined. Additionally, the quality of care will be measured using newly developed quality indicators. The follow-up of 3 months will provide information on the outcomes readmissions, quality of life and additional costs after discharge. All interventions by the clinical pharmacy team will be documented.
Study objective
The active participation of a clinical pharmacy team on the surgical ward will reduce preventable ADE's cost-effectively.
Study design
1. Medication reconciliation at admission and discharge with questionnairre;
2. Daily registration of interventions by clinical pharmacy team;
3. Follow -up by questionnairre within 3 months after admission;
4. Retrospective patient chart analysis to detect ADE's and determine quality of care.
Intervention
Three hospitals will participate. First, baseline assessments (n=480) will be made in each hospital at the surgical wards. Then, in each centre, one unit will randomly be assigned (one-time randomisation) as experimental unit (n= 482) receiving ward-based pharmacy, whereas the other unit will serve as control unit (n= 482) receiving usual pharmaceutical care.
Active participation of a hospital pharmacy team on the surgical ward:
1. Medication reconciliation at admission by pharmacy technicians;
2. Daily review of prescribed medication by hospital pharmacists;
3. Medication reconciliation and couselling at discharge by pharmacy technicians.
Inclusion criteria
1. Study ward: surgical ward;
2. Elective admitted for surgical procedure;
3. Hospital stay: > 48 hours.
Exclusion criteria
1. Patient already included in the study;
2. Admitted from other department within hospital or other hospital.
Design
Recruitment
Followed up by the following (possibly more current) registration
No registrations found.
Other (possibly less up-to-date) registrations in this register
No registrations found.
In other registers
Register | ID |
---|---|
NTR-new | NL2134 |
NTR-old | NTR2258 |
Other | ZonMw : 17088.2706 |
ISRCTN | ISRCTN wordt niet meer aangevraagd. |