Collaborative Medication Reviews to Identify Inappropriate Prescribing in Pre-Admission Medications at Emergency Department Short-Term Ward

Ercan Celikkayalar,1,2 Juha Puustinen,1,3,4 Joni Palmgren,2 Marja Airaksinen1 1Clinical Pharmacy Group, Division of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapy, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland; 2Hospital Pharmacy Department, Satasairaala Central Hospital, Pori, Finland; 3Social S...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Celikkayalar E, Puustinen J, Palmgren J, Airaksinen M
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2021-04-01
Series:Integrated Pharmacy Research and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/collaborative-medication-reviews-to-identify-inappropriate-prescribing-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-IPRP
id doaj-2dcbf47cbd374ce4993a2d954e06bb46
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2dcbf47cbd374ce4993a2d954e06bb462021-04-22T21:23:57ZengDove Medical PressIntegrated Pharmacy Research and Practice2230-52542021-04-01Volume 10233264172Collaborative Medication Reviews to Identify Inappropriate Prescribing in Pre-Admission Medications at Emergency Department Short-Term WardCelikkayalar EPuustinen JPalmgren JAiraksinen MErcan Celikkayalar,1,2 Juha Puustinen,1,3,4 Joni Palmgren,2 Marja Airaksinen1 1Clinical Pharmacy Group, Division of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapy, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland; 2Hospital Pharmacy Department, Satasairaala Central Hospital, Pori, Finland; 3Social Security Center of Pori, Pori, Finland; 4Unit of Neurology, Satasairaala Central Hospital, Pori, FinlandCorrespondence: Ercan Celikkayalar Email eacelikkayalar@gmail.comPurpose: Collaborative medication reviews (CMR) have been shown to reduce inappropriate prescribing (IP) in various settings. This study aimed at describing a CMR practice in an emergency department (ED) short-term ward in Finland to investigate IP in pre-admission medications.Patients and Methods: Pre-admission medications were collaboratively reviewed for all the adult ED admissions within a 5-month study period in 2016. Types of IP were inductively categorized, and descriptive statistics were used to show the incidence and type of IP events.Results: The pre-admission medications of 855 adult ED patients were reviewed by the pharmacist, with 113 IP events identified in 83 (9.7%) of the patients. The majority (81%, n=67) of these patients were older adults (≥ 65 years). Of these 94 IP events identified in 67 older patients, 58 (62%) were confirmed by the ED physicians. The following 3 main categories were inductively developed for the types of identified and confirmed IP events: 1) Misprescribing (prescription of medications that significantly increase the risk of adverse drug events); 2) Overprescribing (prescription of medications for which no clear clinical indications exist); and 3) Underprescribing (omission of potentially beneficial medications that are clinically indicated for treatment or prevention of a disease). Misprescribing was the most common type of IP identified (79% of the identified and 72% confirmed IP events). Benzodiazepines (29%) and antidepressants (28%) were involved in 33 out of 58 (57%) confirmed IP events. Medications with strong anticholinergic effects were involved in 19% of the confirmed IP events.Conclusion: The CMR practice was able to identify IP in pre-admission medications of about one-tenth of ED patients. Older patients using benzodiazepines and drugs with strong anticholinergic effects should be paid special attention to ED admissions.Keywords: medication reviews, collaborative medication reviews, inappropriate prescribing, potentially inappropriate medications, emergency department, clinical pharmacisthttps://www.dovepress.com/collaborative-medication-reviews-to-identify-inappropriate-prescribing-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-IPRPmedication reviewscollaborative medication reviewsinappropriate prescribingpotentially inappropriate medicationsemergency departmentclinical pharmacist
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Celikkayalar E
Puustinen J
Palmgren J
Airaksinen M
spellingShingle Celikkayalar E
Puustinen J
Palmgren J
Airaksinen M
Collaborative Medication Reviews to Identify Inappropriate Prescribing in Pre-Admission Medications at Emergency Department Short-Term Ward
Integrated Pharmacy Research and Practice
medication reviews
collaborative medication reviews
inappropriate prescribing
potentially inappropriate medications
emergency department
clinical pharmacist
author_facet Celikkayalar E
Puustinen J
Palmgren J
Airaksinen M
author_sort Celikkayalar E
title Collaborative Medication Reviews to Identify Inappropriate Prescribing in Pre-Admission Medications at Emergency Department Short-Term Ward
title_short Collaborative Medication Reviews to Identify Inappropriate Prescribing in Pre-Admission Medications at Emergency Department Short-Term Ward
title_full Collaborative Medication Reviews to Identify Inappropriate Prescribing in Pre-Admission Medications at Emergency Department Short-Term Ward
title_fullStr Collaborative Medication Reviews to Identify Inappropriate Prescribing in Pre-Admission Medications at Emergency Department Short-Term Ward
title_full_unstemmed Collaborative Medication Reviews to Identify Inappropriate Prescribing in Pre-Admission Medications at Emergency Department Short-Term Ward
title_sort collaborative medication reviews to identify inappropriate prescribing in pre-admission medications at emergency department short-term ward
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Integrated Pharmacy Research and Practice
issn 2230-5254
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Ercan Celikkayalar,1,2 Juha Puustinen,1,3,4 Joni Palmgren,2 Marja Airaksinen1 1Clinical Pharmacy Group, Division of Pharmacology and Pharmacotherapy, Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland; 2Hospital Pharmacy Department, Satasairaala Central Hospital, Pori, Finland; 3Social Security Center of Pori, Pori, Finland; 4Unit of Neurology, Satasairaala Central Hospital, Pori, FinlandCorrespondence: Ercan Celikkayalar Email eacelikkayalar@gmail.comPurpose: Collaborative medication reviews (CMR) have been shown to reduce inappropriate prescribing (IP) in various settings. This study aimed at describing a CMR practice in an emergency department (ED) short-term ward in Finland to investigate IP in pre-admission medications.Patients and Methods: Pre-admission medications were collaboratively reviewed for all the adult ED admissions within a 5-month study period in 2016. Types of IP were inductively categorized, and descriptive statistics were used to show the incidence and type of IP events.Results: The pre-admission medications of 855 adult ED patients were reviewed by the pharmacist, with 113 IP events identified in 83 (9.7%) of the patients. The majority (81%, n=67) of these patients were older adults (≥ 65 years). Of these 94 IP events identified in 67 older patients, 58 (62%) were confirmed by the ED physicians. The following 3 main categories were inductively developed for the types of identified and confirmed IP events: 1) Misprescribing (prescription of medications that significantly increase the risk of adverse drug events); 2) Overprescribing (prescription of medications for which no clear clinical indications exist); and 3) Underprescribing (omission of potentially beneficial medications that are clinically indicated for treatment or prevention of a disease). Misprescribing was the most common type of IP identified (79% of the identified and 72% confirmed IP events). Benzodiazepines (29%) and antidepressants (28%) were involved in 33 out of 58 (57%) confirmed IP events. Medications with strong anticholinergic effects were involved in 19% of the confirmed IP events.Conclusion: The CMR practice was able to identify IP in pre-admission medications of about one-tenth of ED patients. Older patients using benzodiazepines and drugs with strong anticholinergic effects should be paid special attention to ED admissions.Keywords: medication reviews, collaborative medication reviews, inappropriate prescribing, potentially inappropriate medications, emergency department, clinical pharmacist
topic medication reviews
collaborative medication reviews
inappropriate prescribing
potentially inappropriate medications
emergency department
clinical pharmacist
url https://www.dovepress.com/collaborative-medication-reviews-to-identify-inappropriate-prescribing-peer-reviewed-fulltext-article-IPRP
work_keys_str_mv AT celikkayalare collaborativemedicationreviewstoidentifyinappropriateprescribinginpreadmissionmedicationsatemergencydepartmentshorttermward
AT puustinenj collaborativemedicationreviewstoidentifyinappropriateprescribinginpreadmissionmedicationsatemergencydepartmentshorttermward
AT palmgrenj collaborativemedicationreviewstoidentifyinappropriateprescribinginpreadmissionmedicationsatemergencydepartmentshorttermward
AT airaksinenm collaborativemedicationreviewstoidentifyinappropriateprescribinginpreadmissionmedicationsatemergencydepartmentshorttermward
_version_ 1721513993399435264