View clinical trials related to Polypharmacy.
Filter by:To examine the effect of a cross-sectoral medication review intervention to admitted multi-morbid, polypharmacy patients aged 65+ at SHS in two settings; an acute admission unit (typical admission time < 48 hours) and a medical outpatient setting (patients routinely visits for follow-up, diagnosis or treatment, but do require a bed or overnight care).
To examine the effect of a Medication Coordinator, who facilitates medication reviews in close collaboration with patients using My Medication Plan to reduce the risk of post-hospital inappropriate medication usage.
The goal of this clinical trial is to test the effectiveness of a pharmacist-led, primary care-based de-prescribing intervention for people living with dementia (PLWD) and the person's care partners. The intervention consists of the following strategies: 1) a de-prescribing educational brochure designed to activate the patient and care partner; 2) a single telehealth visit in which an embedded clinical pharmacist discusses the benefits and harms of the patient's medications with the patient and care partner in the context of the person's goals and preferences; and 3) pharmacist-PCP communication in which the pharmacist provides tailored de-prescribing recommendations designed to be useful and actionable for the PCP. The investigators will compare the intervention group with the waitlist control group to see if there is a difference in the primary outcome, the proportion of patients who deprescribe at least one medication by 3 months.
Medication management services (MMS) is a pharmacist-led service of optimizing the medication use and health outcomes, by promoting medication safety and enhancing the ability in self-management of health and diseases of patients and their caregivers. Yet, only limited evidence on the implementation of MMS service in Hong Kong is available. The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the cost effectiveness and effects of implementing MMS in community pharmacies owned by 8 non-government organizations (NGOs) in Hong Kong on humanistic and clinical outcomes in patients with hypertension and/or type II diabetes mellitus. The clinical trial aims to look into the following aspects: - To evaluate the perception and satisfaction of patients on MMS service - To investigate whether MMS could improve patients' adherence to their medication regimen, health-related quality of life, health outcomes and health service utilization, as well as their ability to understand and cope with their illness and drug-related problems - To identify and categorize the types of drug-related problems identified during MMS - To evaluate the cost-effectiveness of implementing MMS in community pharmacies MMS services will be rolled out in a total of 8 NGO community pharmacies progressively (2 pharmacies per phase) in 4 successive phases. Participants will complete the questionnaires at the following time points throughout the trial, namely 1) during recruitment, 2) baseline (1 month before MMS), 3) 3 months after MMS begins, 4) 12 months after MMS begins, and 5) 24 months after MMS begins. Researchers will compare the results of questionnaires conducted at different time points to identify the potential changes in the effects of MMS. Furthermore, researchers will link up the electronic health records of the participants and identify the potential changes in the health outcomes and health service utilizations after receiving MMS.
The aim of this study is to identify and assess new health-associated risk factors, including clinical-pharmacological risk factors. The cohort is built using telecommunication approaches. The associations between clinical-pharmacological, social, demographic, behavioral, and environmental characteristics will be assessed. The continuous depersonalized online survey is performed using the original informational resources in the form of specially designed web-site aimed at identification and assessment of population-based pharmacotherapy patterns including characteristics of self-medication, biologically active food supplement intake, polypharmacy, and adverse drug-drug interactions in the people residing in the ecological conditions of various regions of the country. The invitations to participate in the online survey are sent via the SMS messages using the SMS-Target tool provided by OOO T2 Mobile Company. The survey is performed online at www.zdorov.tpu.ru and www.zdorov.expert both specifically designed for questionnaire publication and data accumulation.
This single-arm pilot study will evaluate the effects of an intervention to reduce exposure to unnecessary or potentially harmful medications among residents with dementia living in an assisted living facility. The goal of the intervention is to safely deprescribe medications (defined by dose reductions and stopped medications), based on a combination of clinical criteria and resident/surrogate preferences. The investigators will evaluate the effects of the intervention on the total number of medications deprescribed from enrollment at 30, 60, and 90 days along with resident/surrogate reports of quality of life at enrollment and 90 days.
Background: Patients living in Geriatric Residences (RG) have increased aging, comorbidity, spending on health resources and mortality. High drug use is associated with an increased risk of falls, disability, and death. It is estimated that 20-50% of inappropriate medications are consumed in the elderly. Hypothesis: A pharmaceutical intervention based on a clinical review of the pharmacotherapeutic plan of patients in RG will be useful in optimizing the prescription in terms of safety, reducing by 10% or more the inappropriate prescriptions. Objectives: Evaluate the effectiveness of a structured pharmaceutical intervention based on the clinical review of the pharmacotherapeutic plan to improve its adequacy. Decrease inadequate prescriptions in patients admitted to RG by 10% Methodology: Pre-post, quasi-experimental intervention study with control group with prospective follow-up of a cohort of patients in RG. The intervention consists of the clinical review of the pharmacotherapeutic plan carried out by the pharmacist and subsequently agreed in the Pharmacotherapeutic Advisory Committee. Determinations: The study variables will be evaluated at baseline and 3 months post-intervention. The primary variable is number of inappropriate prescriptions. Statistical analysis: Percentage change will be measured before and after the intervention. Descriptive statistics will be performed for quantitative variables such as qualitative and comparison of means and proportions. Expected results: Achieve a 10% decrease in inappropriate prescriptions Applicability and Relevance: This study will expand the collaboration between the Pharmacy and Primary Care physicians, promoting the continuum of care, strengthening the safety culture, and improving prescribing habits.
The goal of this cluster randomized controlled trial is to compare transitional multidisciplinary pharmacotherapeutic care (TMPC) with usual care in patients aged 70 years or older with polypharmacy, admitted to the hospital via the emergency department for longer than 24 hours and that have an elevated risk of drug related readmissions. The primary aims of the study are: - To assess whether TMPC leads to a decrease in number of DRreAs compared to usual care during the first 30 days after index hospitalisation. - To assess whether TMPC is cost-effective Participants will receive TMPC in hospitals allocated to the intervention. TMPC will be executed by a pharmacotherapeutic team, it consists of the following four elements: - pharmacotherapeutic analysis - transitional multidisciplinary discussion - pharmacotherapeutic care interview and discussion with the patient - discharge note with the pharmacotherapeutic care plan Researchers will compare TMPC with usual care to assess the effect and cost-effectiveness of TMPC.
The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to assess the effectiveness of a pharmacist-led medication review using the locally developed Malaysian Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing Screening tool in Older Adults (MALPIP), an explicit criteria in hospitalized older adults. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. The effectiveness of the intervention in reducing the number of PIMs and chronic medications after discharge 2. The impact of the intervention on quality of life, falls events, emergency department visits, readmissions and survivals Researchers will compare the control group to see if there is corresponding changes to the outcomes specified above.
The investigators' hypothesis is that the individualized review of the pharmacotherapeutic plans of patients in a home healthcare program will be effective in improving the quality and safety of treatments. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of a standardized pharmaceutical intervention for the review and optimization of pharmacological treatments in ATDOM patients (catalan home healthcare program at primary care level), compared to the usual management.