Cargando…

Preventing hospital admissions by reviewing medication (PHARM) in primary care: design of the cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre PHARM-study

BACKGROUND: Medication can be effective but can also be harmful and even cause hospital admissions. Medication review or pharmacotherapy review has often been proposed as a solution to prevent these admissions and to improve the effectiveness and safety of pharmacotherapy. However, most published ra...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Leendertse, Anne J, de Koning, Fred HP, Goudswaard, Alex N, Jonkhoff, Andries R, van den Bogert, Sander CA, de Gier, Han J, Egberts, Toine CG, van den Bemt, Patricia MLA
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3024925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21214918
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-11-4
_version_ 1782196833322270720
author Leendertse, Anne J
de Koning, Fred HP
Goudswaard, Alex N
Jonkhoff, Andries R
van den Bogert, Sander CA
de Gier, Han J
Egberts, Toine CG
van den Bemt, Patricia MLA
author_facet Leendertse, Anne J
de Koning, Fred HP
Goudswaard, Alex N
Jonkhoff, Andries R
van den Bogert, Sander CA
de Gier, Han J
Egberts, Toine CG
van den Bemt, Patricia MLA
author_sort Leendertse, Anne J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Medication can be effective but can also be harmful and even cause hospital admissions. Medication review or pharmacotherapy review has often been proposed as a solution to prevent these admissions and to improve the effectiveness and safety of pharmacotherapy. However, most published randomised controlled trials on pharmacotherapy reviews showed no or little effect on morbidity and mortality. Therefore we designed the PHARM (Preventing Hospital Admissions by Reviewing Medication)-study with the objective to study the effect of the total pharmaceutical care process on medication related hospital admissions and on adverse drug events, survival and quality of life. METHODS/DESIGN: The PHARM-study is designed as a cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre study in an integrated primary care setting. Patients with a high risk of a medication related hospital admission are included in the study with randomisation at GP (general practitioner) level. We aim to include 14200 patients, 7100 in each arm, from at least 142 pharmacy practices. The intervention consists of a patient-centred, structured, pharmaceutical care process. This process consists of several steps, is continuous and occurrs over multiple encounters of patients and clinicians. The steps of this pharmaceutical care process are a pharmaceutical anamnesis, a review of the patient's pharmacotherapy, the formulation and execution of a pharmaceutical care plan combined with the monitoring and follow up evaluation of the care plan and pharmacotherapy. The patient's own pharmacist and GP carry out the intervention. The control group receives usual care. The primary outcome of the study is the frequency of hospital admissions related to medication within the study period of 12 months of each patient. The secondary outcomes are survival, quality of life, adverse drug events and severe adverse drug events. The outcomes will be analysed by using mixed-effects Cox models. DISCUSSION: The PHARM-study is one of the largest controlled trials to study the effectiveness of the total pharmaceutical care process. The study should therefore provide evidence as to whether such a pharmaceutical care process should be implemented in the primary care setting. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Trial number: NTR 2647
format Text
id pubmed-3024925
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2011
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-30249252011-01-22 Preventing hospital admissions by reviewing medication (PHARM) in primary care: design of the cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre PHARM-study Leendertse, Anne J de Koning, Fred HP Goudswaard, Alex N Jonkhoff, Andries R van den Bogert, Sander CA de Gier, Han J Egberts, Toine CG van den Bemt, Patricia MLA BMC Health Serv Res Study Protocol BACKGROUND: Medication can be effective but can also be harmful and even cause hospital admissions. Medication review or pharmacotherapy review has often been proposed as a solution to prevent these admissions and to improve the effectiveness and safety of pharmacotherapy. However, most published randomised controlled trials on pharmacotherapy reviews showed no or little effect on morbidity and mortality. Therefore we designed the PHARM (Preventing Hospital Admissions by Reviewing Medication)-study with the objective to study the effect of the total pharmaceutical care process on medication related hospital admissions and on adverse drug events, survival and quality of life. METHODS/DESIGN: The PHARM-study is designed as a cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre study in an integrated primary care setting. Patients with a high risk of a medication related hospital admission are included in the study with randomisation at GP (general practitioner) level. We aim to include 14200 patients, 7100 in each arm, from at least 142 pharmacy practices. The intervention consists of a patient-centred, structured, pharmaceutical care process. This process consists of several steps, is continuous and occurrs over multiple encounters of patients and clinicians. The steps of this pharmaceutical care process are a pharmaceutical anamnesis, a review of the patient's pharmacotherapy, the formulation and execution of a pharmaceutical care plan combined with the monitoring and follow up evaluation of the care plan and pharmacotherapy. The patient's own pharmacist and GP carry out the intervention. The control group receives usual care. The primary outcome of the study is the frequency of hospital admissions related to medication within the study period of 12 months of each patient. The secondary outcomes are survival, quality of life, adverse drug events and severe adverse drug events. The outcomes will be analysed by using mixed-effects Cox models. DISCUSSION: The PHARM-study is one of the largest controlled trials to study the effectiveness of the total pharmaceutical care process. The study should therefore provide evidence as to whether such a pharmaceutical care process should be implemented in the primary care setting. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Trial number: NTR 2647 BioMed Central 2011-01-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3024925/ /pubmed/21214918 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-11-4 Text en Copyright ©2011 Leendertse et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (<url>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0</url>), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Leendertse, Anne J
de Koning, Fred HP
Goudswaard, Alex N
Jonkhoff, Andries R
van den Bogert, Sander CA
de Gier, Han J
Egberts, Toine CG
van den Bemt, Patricia MLA
Preventing hospital admissions by reviewing medication (PHARM) in primary care: design of the cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre PHARM-study
title Preventing hospital admissions by reviewing medication (PHARM) in primary care: design of the cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre PHARM-study
title_full Preventing hospital admissions by reviewing medication (PHARM) in primary care: design of the cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre PHARM-study
title_fullStr Preventing hospital admissions by reviewing medication (PHARM) in primary care: design of the cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre PHARM-study
title_full_unstemmed Preventing hospital admissions by reviewing medication (PHARM) in primary care: design of the cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre PHARM-study
title_short Preventing hospital admissions by reviewing medication (PHARM) in primary care: design of the cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre PHARM-study
title_sort preventing hospital admissions by reviewing medication (pharm) in primary care: design of the cluster randomised, controlled, multi-centre pharm-study
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3024925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21214918
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6963-11-4
work_keys_str_mv AT leendertseannej preventinghospitaladmissionsbyreviewingmedicationpharminprimarycaredesignoftheclusterrandomisedcontrolledmulticentrepharmstudy
AT dekoningfredhp preventinghospitaladmissionsbyreviewingmedicationpharminprimarycaredesignoftheclusterrandomisedcontrolledmulticentrepharmstudy
AT goudswaardalexn preventinghospitaladmissionsbyreviewingmedicationpharminprimarycaredesignoftheclusterrandomisedcontrolledmulticentrepharmstudy
AT jonkhoffandriesr preventinghospitaladmissionsbyreviewingmedicationpharminprimarycaredesignoftheclusterrandomisedcontrolledmulticentrepharmstudy
AT vandenbogertsanderca preventinghospitaladmissionsbyreviewingmedicationpharminprimarycaredesignoftheclusterrandomisedcontrolledmulticentrepharmstudy
AT degierhanj preventinghospitaladmissionsbyreviewingmedicationpharminprimarycaredesignoftheclusterrandomisedcontrolledmulticentrepharmstudy
AT egbertstoinecg preventinghospitaladmissionsbyreviewingmedicationpharminprimarycaredesignoftheclusterrandomisedcontrolledmulticentrepharmstudy
AT vandenbemtpatriciamla preventinghospitaladmissionsbyreviewingmedicationpharminprimarycaredesignoftheclusterrandomisedcontrolledmulticentrepharmstudy