View clinical trials related to Polypharmacy.
Filter by:The investigators will link community pharmacy and primary care practices via a shared electronic health record to improve medication therapy management for older patients taking complex prescription (Rx) regimens. The Technology-Enabled Alliance for Medication Therapy Management (TEAM) intervention will link a major, national community pharmacy chain (Walgreens) to primary care practices (Access Community Health Network) via a shared electronic health record (EHR) platform (Epic, Verona WI). Through shared access to patients' medical records, pharmacists can perform comprehensive medication therapy management services, document and communicate patients' Rx challenges for review and action by primary care providers. The aims of this investigation are to: 1. Evaluate the fidelity and efficacy of the TEAM intervention to promote healthcare provider counseling, medication reconciliation, and safe regimen use among adults taking complex Rx regimens. 2. Explore patient, healthcare provider (pharmacist, prescriber), community pharmacy and/or primary care practice barriers to implementation. 3. Determine the costs of the TEAM intervention from both a community pharmacy and primary care practice perspective.
The purpose of the study is to implement a pharmacist-led deprescribing intervention for adults 65 and older taking 10 or more medications at University of Texas (UT) Physicians clinics and to assess the effect of the pharmacist intervention on the incidence of adverse drug reactions, emergency room visits, and hospitalizations as well as costs to the patient and to the healthcare system in adults 65 and older taking 10 or more medications treated at UT Physicians.
The aim of this pilot study is to develop and test an intervention (defined as the General Practice Pharmacist [GPP] intervention) involving pharmacists working with General Practitioners (GPs) to optimise prescribing in Ireland. The study will determine the costs and potential effectiveness of the GPP intervention and, through engagement with key stakeholders, will explore the potential for an RCT of the GPP intervention in Irish general practice settings.
Deprescribing, the process of safely reducing or discontinuing unnecessary or harmful medication, has the potential to decrease polypharmacy and improve health outcomes. In this study a structured implicit algorithm, focusing on both extrinsic medication factors (eg change in disease) and intrinsic patient factors (eg. pill burden) will be used.
This study assesses the effectiveness of a complex intervention in young-old patients with multimorbidity and polypharmacy aimed at improving physician drug prescription in primary care, measured by hospitalization-mortality at six 6 (T1), 12 (T2) and 18 (T3) months from baseline compared to usual care.
Polypharmacy, the use of multiple or inappropriate medications, has the potential to harm older adults by causing cognitive impairment, falls, and hospitalisations. The nurse-led intervention (The ADRe Profile) to review mental health medicines has demonstrated improved care quality by: identifying serious adverse drug reactions (ADRs); reducing prescription of mental health medicines; reducing the prevalence of pain and nausea; and, increasing non-urgent national health service (NHS) contacts. The investigators will develop ADRe to encompass medicines commonly prescribed in primary care and evaluate intervention implementation in care homes in Aneurin Bevan University Health Board.
To investigate the effect of physician-initiated, medication reviews in geriatric patients on self-reported health-related quality of life, admissions, mortality and falls.
Medications can help older adults but can also harm them. Frail older adults tend to have many health problems that require treatment, but are also at risk of harm from the medications prescribed. This makes it hard to get older adults the treatments they need and keep them safe from the harms from medications. It ends up that a lot of visits to emergency rooms and hospitals are due to medications, especially for older adults. Previous research has shown the benefits of stopping medications older adults no longer need. Even so, healthcare professionals do not always do this as well as they could. Our goal is to make a collection of resources for pharmacists who work with doctors and nurses in primary settings that will help support older adults as they safely stop medications that are no longer needed. The investigators will use knowledge and tools that are already known and published. In the first six months the team, which includes older adults and their families, pharmacists, doctors, nurses, and healthcare policymakers developed a framework and resource toolbox that pharmacists can use to help older adults stop medications that are no longer needed. In the remaining 10 months, the investigators will use the resource toolbox in primary healthcare teams and nursing homes. Overall, the investigators expect that by using the resources the pharmacists will be able to support patients stop medications they no longer need and help reduce the number of pills people take, reduce drug costs, reduce harms from medication use and improve quality of life for frail older adults and their loved ones.
Multiple morbidity is increasing, especially in elderly people, with a corresponding increase in polypharmacy and inappropriate prescriptions. According to different evaluations, between 25 and 75% of patients aged 75 or older are exposed to 5 or more drugs. There is increasing evidence that polypharmacy can cause more harm than good, especially in elderly people, due to factors such as drug-drug and drug-disease interactions. Many strategies were proposed to reduce polypharmacy and inappropriate prescribing, but there is little evidence to show benefit. There is an urgent need to implement effective strategies. The application methodology must be simple so that it does not fail in daily practice. For the current plan, an electronic medical record, named "DrApp", will be used, which will include a drug interaction program, SIMDA, which will automatically indicate the medication prescriptions that involve a risk for the patient. The first indication of each patient admitted to two rooms of the Internal Medicine Department of the Hospital de Clínicas José de San Martín will be registered. The indications will be compared in the 4 months prior to the incorporation of the SIMDA program with the 4 months after the incorporation of the program. Between both stages a period of 2 weeks will be established in which the data will not be recorded. The minimum number of patients that will be included in each stage is 100. The primary end point is to compare the total number of indications per inpatient, before the availability of the SIMDA program and after the application of this program. The objective is to evaluate if the computer program of detection of drug interactions allows to limit the polypharmacy in hospitalized patients.
The objective of this randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to evaluate whether the Systematic Tool to Reduce Inappropriate Prescribing (STRIP), put into practice through the STRIP Assistant (STRIPA) and implemented by general practitioners (GPs), will lead to an improvement in clinical and economic outcomes in patients aged 65 or older with multimorbidity and polypharmacy.