View clinical trials related to Adverse Drug Events.
Filter by:Drug-Related Problems (DRP) are a variety of events or circumstances that can interfere with the expected results of a treatment. They may be due to the drug itself, its association with other treatments, its incompatibility with the patient, its misuse... When these situations result in harm, they are referred to as adverse drug events (ADEs). DRP and particularly ADE represent a major public health problem in healthcare institutions because of their impact on morbidity and health costs. DRPs are largely preventable and actions can be set up to detect and correct them. It is in this context that clinical pharmacy has expanded, with the development of new activities to help secure drug management. In our institution, the investigators have implemented several activities in different care services, including - medication reconciliation, - an ADE detection. These activities have interesting and encouraging results in terms of impact on the prevention of DRP. However, they can only be carried out on a limited number of patients, depending on the pharmaceutical resources available. The investigators therefore need tools to prioritize our activities on the most at-risk patients. In this study, the investigators seek to identify DRP risk factors and develop DRP risk scores, with the objective to improve the detection and even prevention of DRP. Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
This registry aims to monitor the safety of Qizhi Tongluo Capsules and to identify the potential risk factors for its adverse drug reactions.
The implementation of a medication reconciliation intervention including: medication reconciliation on admission and discharge, bedside medication counselling and take-home medication list, on the development of adverse drug events within 30 days post discharge as primary outcome. Secondary outcome is the evaluation of its impact on health care resource utilization
To create a registry/database of patients who either have taken drugs that treat cardiovascular conditions or that have presented with cardiovascular symptoms that may be related to medication.
Medication discrepancies, defined as unintentional differences found between patients' medical records and patients' reports of the medication they are taking, occur frequently after hospital discharge, predisposing to adverse drug events (ADEs), emergency department visits and readmissions. Resolving medication discrepancies - medication reconciliation - is mandated at every care transition, but little is known about intervention strategies to improve medication reconciliation in the post-discharge period, when patients may lack prompt access to primary care and are at high risk for ADEs. To address this gap, the investigators developed and pilot tested the Secure Messaging for Medication Reconciliation Tool (SMMRT), with a pharmacist communicating with Veterans to review medications and reconcile discrepancies after hospital discharge via Secure Messaging (SM), within My HealtheVet (MHV), VA's patient portal. The objectives of The SMMRT Trial are therefore To optimize the end-users' experience with SMMRT through usability testing and refinement of the tool; To conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of usual care vs. usual care plus MHV Training vs. usual care plus MHV Training plus SMMRT to reduce hospital utilization; To evaluate how Veterans and staff perceived the impact of SMMRT on routine clinical practices and, specifically, on Veterans' interactions with their primary care providers.
Patients meeting eligibility criteria will be randomized into two groups, one receiving pharmacogenetic testing and the other not receiving pharmacogenetic testing. In this open-label trial, a pharmacist will make medication therapy recommendations using YouScript® Personalized Prescribing System for patients who receive genetic testing and standard drug information resources per usual for patients who do not undergo pharmacogenetic testing.
This registry aims to monitor the safety of Compound Kuh-seng Injection and to identify the potential risk factors for the adverse drug reactions. Compound Kuh-seng Injection is a kind of natural compound injection extracted from herbs Kuh-seng (Radix Sophorae Flavescentis) and Rhizoma Heterosmilacis Japonicae.
This multicenter observational study aims to investigate the benefits of providing pharmacogenetic testing with the YouScript Personalized Prescribing System which includes a clinical decision support tool and individualized pharmacist recommendations to elderly polypharmacy patients who are most at risk of adverse drug events. The YouScript system is unique in identifying drug-gene, and drug-drug-gene interactions that are missed by existing systems, and represent over 35% of significant interaction warnings. Data analysis will assess the impact of recommendations for medication changes on clinical decision making, patient outcomes, and healthcare resource utilization to determine which medications, specialties, or patient segments derive the greatest benefit from this intervention. Data gathered from patients enrolled in this study will be compared to patients matched on key characteristics from Inovalon's MORE2 healthcare database.
Adverse drug events are unintended and harmful events related to medication use and a leading cause of emergency department visits, unplanned hospital admissions and deaths. In the emergency department, physicians frequently misdiagnose adverse drug events leading to treatment delays. Our objective is to evaluate the effect of pharmacist-led medication review in high-risk emergency department patients on prolonged hospital stay. This prospective multi-centre, quasi-randomized study is nested within an existing quality improvement program. Triage nurses flag incoming emergency department patients at high-risk for adverse drug events by applying a clinical decision rule consisting of four variables (co-morbid conditions, antibiotic use within 7 days, medication changes within 28 days, and age). Consecutive eligible high-risk patients are enrolled into the medication review study, and systematically allocated to pharmacist-led medication review or usual care. In the intervention group, medication review pharmacists collect best-possible medication histories, review the patient's medications for appropriateness and adverse drug events, and communicate the results of medication review to patients, caregivers and physicians. In the usual care group, physicians refer patients to onsite pharmacists for medication management questions on an as needed basis. Health outcomes are assessed using anonymized data linkage to administrative health databases. The primary outcome is the percent of days spent in hospital during the first 30 days after the index emergency department visit
One of the most common health care interventions in any healthcare setting is a medication prescription. Unfortunately, up to 25% of outpatient prescriptions are associated with adverse drug events (ADEs). ADEs decrease patient health directly and can lead to non-adherence, which in turn has negative consequences. The investigators recently conducted a pilot project in which the feasibility and potential utility of an information technology enabled outreach program for monitoring patients receiving an outpatient prescription was tested. This intervention involved the use of an interactive voice response system programmed to automatically call ambulatory care patients following a prescription. If the system identified a potential medication problem, a pharmacist was notified who contacted the patient, modified the therapy accordingly, and informed a physician when necessary. The pilot project included 568 patients with diverse illnesses in two Canadian cities. High levels of patient and provider acceptability of the system were determined from 21 day interviews. The program identified 56 of 125 (45%) ADEs and 10 of 26 (30%) of primary non-compliance events. Very few episodes of ameliorable ADEs were observed. The investigators feel these results justify a randomized control trial to assess the effectiveness of the intervention for improving patient centered outcomes. Ambulatory care patients receiving incident prescriptions for one of four conditions (hypertension, diabetes mellitus, depression, and anxiety) will be randomized to the intervention or routine care. The investigators expect that the system will reduce the severity and duration of outpatient ADEs and improve adherence to medication care.