Heart Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pharmacist Intervention for Low-Literacy in Cardiovascular Disease
Many people who have recently left the hospital have difficulties managing their medications, and medication errors are common. Patients with low health literacy levels may have a particularly difficult time understanding medication dosing and instructions. This study will evaluate a literacy-focused program that provides educational assistance from pharmacists at the time of hospital discharge to people hospitalized with heart problems.
After hospital discharge, many people experience difficulty in managing their medication
regimens. This can be due to medication dosing changes, challenges in adjusting new
medications with those that were taken previously, inadequate discharge instructions from
hospital personnel, and inadequate follow-up. Difficulty with medication management can lead
to medication errors that result in harmful side effects, poor disease control, hospital
readmission, or even death. People with low health literacy often have greater difficulty
with understanding and managing their medication regimens and as a result they experience
more medication use errors. Although research shows that many medication errors could be
prevented or lessened through improved doctor communication and patient-centered treatment
programs, little research has been done on the effectiveness of such programs among
low-literacy patients or of such programs during key transition times like hospital
discharge. Getting pharmacists involved with patient care before hospital discharge may
prevent unnecessary and dangerous medication errors from occurring once patients leave the
hospital. Because of the severity of heart conditions and the likelihood of serious adverse
effects from non-compliance with heart medications, this study will evaluate people admitted
to the hospital for acute coronary syndromes or heart failure. The purpose of this study is
to evaluate the effectiveness of a health literacy-focused, pharmacist-delivered program at
reducing medication errors in heart patients during the first month after hospital
discharge.
This study will enroll people admitted to the hospital who have acute coronary syndromes or
heart failure. Participants will be randomly assigned to either the pharmacist-delivered
program or usual care. Participants assigned to the intervention group will receive a
pharmacist-assisted medication review while in the hospital, counseling from a pharmacist at
the time of hospital discharge, a low-literacy education tool that details the discharge
medications, a follow-up phone call 1 to 4 days after discharge, and additional phone calls
as needed. Participants receiving usual care will receive a doctor-assisted medication
review and nurse-provided guidance on medication usage at the time of hospital discharge.
Approximately 30 days after hospital discharge, study researchers will call all participants
to collect information on serious medication errors, health care utilization, and
disease-specific quality of life.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Health Services Research
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