Deprescribing in Hospice Patients: Discontinuing Aspirin, Multivitamins, and Statins

Objective: To facilitate deprescribing of aspirin, multivitamins, and statins in hospice patients enrolled in Mayo Clinic Hospice, Rochester, Minnesota. Patients and Methods: During the fall of 2019, we conducted a quality improvement project to improve care of Mayo Clinic Hospice patients by decrea...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cari E. Low, MD, Daniel E. Sanchez Pellecer, MD, Wil L. Santivasi, MD, Virginia H. Thompson, RPh, Theresa Elwood, RN, Ashly J. Davidson, MSN, RN, Julie A. Tlusty, MSN, RN, Molly A. Feely, MD, Cory Ingram, MD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-08-01
Series:Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Innovations, Quality & Outcomes
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2542454821001065
Description
Summary:Objective: To facilitate deprescribing of aspirin, multivitamins, and statins in hospice patients enrolled in Mayo Clinic Hospice, Rochester, Minnesota. Patients and Methods: During the fall of 2019, we conducted a quality improvement project to improve care of Mayo Clinic Hospice patients by decreasing the percentage of patients taking aspirin, multivitamins, or statins. Project interventions included the addition of a palliative medicine fellow to the hospice interdisciplinary team, nurse education, and implementation of an evidence-based deprescribing resource tool. The resource tool included a communication framework to guide deprescribing conversations and a literature summary supporting deprescribing. The project team recorded the number of patients taking 1 of these medications by intermittently surveying the hospice census. Process and counterbalance measures were tracked with online surveys of hospice nursing staff. Results: At the start of the project, 22 of 69 patients (32%) were taking aspirin, a multivitamin, or a statin. After introduction of the deprescribing resource tool and the addition of a palliative medicine fellow to the interdisciplinary team, this was reduced to 20 of 83 patients (24%), a 24% decrease. Results appeared to be driven primarily by a reduction in multivitamin use (33% decrease). Self-reported comfort and knowledge about deprescribing improved among the hospice nursing staff, as did satisfaction in their workflow from 5.4 to 6.0 (maximum, 7). Conclusion: The addition of a dedicated team member to address medication issues and provision of an evidence-based deprescribing resource tool appear to reduce the use of unnecessary and potentially harmful medications in ambulatory hospice patients.
ISSN:2542-4548