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Ambulatory Medication Reconciliation Following Hospital Discharge

Not Applicable
Conditions
Medication Administered in Error
Adverse Drug Events
Interventions
Other: Outpatient Medication Reconciliation
Registration Number
NCT00740675
Lead Sponsor
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Brief Summary

Adverse drug events (ADEs) after hospital discharge are common. The purpose of this research study is see if we can design an electronic tool given to your primary care provider (PCP) that will reduce adverse drug events, hospital readmissions, and emergency department visits after you are discharged from the hospital.

Detailed Description

The objective of this research is to reduce the incidence of post-discharge medication discrepancies, preventable and ameliorable ADEs, hospital readmissions, and ED visits through the use of HIT. The proposed tool will prompt primary care physicians to perform medication reconciliation at the first post-discharge outpatient visit, clearly display and organize preadmission and discharge medication regimens, and facilitate the creation of the new post-discharge medication list with just a few keystrokes. Using methodologies from prior studies at BWH, we will evaluate the intervention in a two-site RCT. The study will be conducted at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital, taking advantage of our rich experience with designing and testing new informatics applications, including one for inpatient medication reconciliation.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
912
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patients admitted to BWH or MGH who plan to follow up with a PCP in one of 12 primary care practices affiliated with BWH or MGH.

  • Patients will need to meet the following criteria:

      1. be 55 years or older,
      1. be admitted to the participating delivery system's hospital during the study period for a non-psychiatric condition,
      1. have no plans to enter hospice,
      1. be discharged back to the community,
      1. be prescribed 5 or more medications at discharge, including at least one of the following:
      • antibiotics,
      • insulin,
      • antihypertensives,
      • anti-rejection,
      • antiarrhythmics,
      • inhalers,
      • antiepileptics,
      • antianginals,
      • pain medications,
      • oral hypoglycemics,
      • steroids,
      • anticoagulants.
    • These drugs were selected because they require close monitoring, increase risk for drug-drug interactions, have a narrow therapeutic window, or are known to increase risk for ADEs in the older adult population

Exclusion Criteria

Unable to provide informed consent and has no proxy who administers patient's medications and can provide informed consent

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
1Outpatient Medication ReconciliationAt post-discharge follow-up visit with PCP, PCP views: 1. Discharge medication reconciliation screen. 2. Prompts to perform post-discharge reconciliation at the first post-discharge visit.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
presence of at least one serious medication error per patient30 days post-discharge
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
ED visits and non-scheduled hospital readmissions and ED visitswithin 30 days of discharge
Accuracy of medication list in ambulatory electronic medical record30 days post discharge

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

Brigham & Women's Hospital

🇺🇸

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

Massachusetts General Hospital

🇺🇸

Boston, Massachusetts, United States

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