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Communication Between Hospital and Community Pharmacists: Impact on Drug Management at Discharge

Not Applicable
Conditions
Treatment Error
Interventions
Other: reconciliation
Registration Number
NCT02006797
Lead Sponsor
University Hospital, Tours
Brief Summary

This study will evaluate the impact of a communication between hospital pharmacist and community pharmacists in addition to drugs reconciliation procedure at discharge. It will be conducted in 21 french public hospitals.

Detailed Description

Transition points during hospitalization are at risk of drug related problems (DRP) especially admission and discharge. Reconciliation procedure at admission lead by a clinical pharmacist had been proved to decrease DRP. The community pharmacist (CP) is often the first health professional that patients meet at discharge. He/she is in charge of dispensing their medication to patients and give treatment information. However because of lack of information community pharmacist is not always able to identify problems and this may lead to dispense wrong drugs and/or wrong dosage and/or give wrong information. The objective of this study is to assess the impact of drug reconciliation performed at discharge completed by a communication between the Hospital Pharmacist (HP) and community pharmacist on drug related problem during the 7 days following discharge at home.

The study is a cluster randomized cross-over trial. It involves 21 French universitarian and non-universitarian hospitals with 42 care units: 22 medical units and 20 surgical units. Each unit (a unit corresponds to a cluster) is involved during two consecutive 14-day periods which are randomly assigned as "experimental" or "control" where control corresponds to usual care. During the experimental period, for each eligible patient discharged during the period, a reconciliation procedure will be performed by the HP, with communication to the patient. The HP will further inform the patient's community pharmacist about patient's drug therapy \[modification in home medication, acute drugs prescribed, shelved treatments and/or labs results to survey patient\]. Eligible patients will be over 18, attending to the same community pharmacist for at least 3 months. We will exclude patients with a length stay over 21 days (too many therapeutic modifications), those who do not return to home, and also palliative patient. The primary outcome is a composite outcome associating any kind of drug misuse during the 7 days following discharge. It will be assessed by phone at day 7 (+/-2) by a pharmacist in charge of the study (PCS) will phone both patients and community pharmacists . The secondary outcome will be the unplanned hospitalizations observed in each group assessed by phone at day 35 (+/-5). We plan to recruit 1,176 patients, i.e. 14 per period per unit.

This study will assess the impact of a reconciliation procedure at discharge followed by a communication between HP and community pharmacists . Also it will identify the type of patients for which the intervention is the most relevant in France and may be generalized to other countries that have the same care organisation.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1176
Inclusion Criteria
  • patients over 18
  • patients attending to the same CP for at least 3 months
  • patients speaking french
Exclusion Criteria
  • patients with a length stay over 21 days (too many therapeutic modifications),
  • patients who do not return to home,
  • palliative patients and/or expected end of life
  • patients that will not give their informed consent

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
interventionreconciliationpatients with reconciliation procedure at discharge and included in the exchange process
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
drug related problems (DRP)7 days after patient discharge

The primary outcome is a composite endpoint associated all the problems/dysfunctions that can be observed from the hospital to home during 7 days after discharge. We will be taking in account the occurence of a dysfunction every time that one of the following problems will happen: - first drug problem; the drug taken by the patient has a problem: it is not the right medicine (Name, form, route, dose). The fault may be 1) an error between the processing of transcription at the admission and the discharge, 2) a therapeutic modification related to therapeutic formulary restriction, the home medication is replaced by an another one that may be less adaptated to patient, 3) an error linked to the writing. Second : patient due to patient; the patient doesn't take what was prescribed and / or treatments that he takes are stopped. Third- :presence of a gap in the continuity and duration of therapy: the patient could not have his medication when he's coming at the pharmacy

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
clinical impact of problemsdays 7 after discharge

all problems will be scored of the potential iatrogenic impact (from 0: none to 3: fatal) by a team associated a nephrologist, a cardiologist, a gastroenterologist and a clinical pharmacist.

patient satisfactionday 7 after patient discharge

the patient will have to tell his satisfaction about his drugs management by health professionals at discharge. It will be evaluated by a Likert scale with 4 items.

number of non-planned hospitalizationdays 35 after discharge

number of non-planned hospitalizations in each group

time spend by hospital pharmacist on reconciliation and communication to community pharmacistat day 2/3 after discharge

the hospital pharmacist will notice the time spent to patient reconciliation and communicate informations to community pharmacist. Time will be those declared by the hospital pharmacist

all compounds of the composite primary outcome measure (patient errors, medical error and DRP)day 7 after discharge
community pharmacist satisfaction about exchanges with hospital pharmacists7 days after patient discharge

the community pharmacist will have to tell his satisfaction about his drugs management by health professionals at discharge. It will be evaluated by a Likert scale with 4 items.

percentage of drugs prescription modified by the hospital pharmacist at dischargeat discharge

Trial Locations

Locations (14)

Hopitaux civils de Colmar

🇫🇷

Colmar, France

Hopital de Mercy Metz-Thionville

🇫🇷

Metz, France

Hopital de Hautepierre

🇫🇷

Strasbourg, France

Centre Hospitalier Compiègne-Noyon

🇫🇷

Compiegne, France

Hopital Jacques Monod

🇫🇷

Le Havre, France

Hopital Inter Armées

🇫🇷

Saint Mande, France

CHU Conception

🇫🇷

Marseille, France

Centre Hospitalier

🇫🇷

Nimes, France

Centre Hospitalier Alès-Cévennes

🇫🇷

Ales, France

Centre Hospitalier Universitaire

🇫🇷

Tours, France

Hopital de la Cavale Blanche

🇫🇷

Brest, France

Hopital ESTAING

🇫🇷

Clermont-ferrand, France

Centre Hospitalier Pierre Bérégovoy

🇫🇷

Nevers, France

Hopital Archet

🇫🇷

Nice, France

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