Cargando…

Pattern of drug therapy problems and interventions in ambulatory patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in Nigeria

OBJECTIVES: We describe the frequency and types of drug therapy problems (DTPs), and interventions carried out to resolve them, among a cohort of HIV-infected patients on ART in Jos, Nigeria. METHODS: A prospective pharmacists’ intervention study was conducted between January and August 2012 at the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ojeh, Victor B., Naima, Nasir, Abah, Isaac O., Falang, Kakjing D., Lucy, Ogwuche, London, Ibrahim, Dady, Christiana, Agaba, Patricia, Agbaji, Oche
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Centro de Investigaciones y Publicaciones Farmaceuticas 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4482846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26131046
_version_ 1782378508029263872
author Ojeh, Victor B.
Naima, Nasir
Abah, Isaac O.
Falang, Kakjing D.
Lucy, Ogwuche
London, Ibrahim
Dady, Christiana
Agaba, Patricia
Agbaji, Oche
author_facet Ojeh, Victor B.
Naima, Nasir
Abah, Isaac O.
Falang, Kakjing D.
Lucy, Ogwuche
London, Ibrahim
Dady, Christiana
Agaba, Patricia
Agbaji, Oche
author_sort Ojeh, Victor B.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: We describe the frequency and types of drug therapy problems (DTPs), and interventions carried out to resolve them, among a cohort of HIV-infected patients on ART in Jos, Nigeria. METHODS: A prospective pharmacists’ intervention study was conducted between January and August 2012 at the outpatient HIV clinic of the Jos University Teaching Hospital (JUTH). Pharmacists identified DTPs and made recommendations to resolve them. The main outcome measures were number of DTPs encountered, interventions proposed and acceptance rate of recommendations. RESULTS: A total of 42,416 prescriptions were dispensed to 9339 patients during the eight months study. A total of 420 interventions (Intervention rate of 1 per 100 prescriptions) were made to resolve DTPs in 401 (4.3%) patients with a mean age of 41 (SD=10) years, and made up of 73% females. DTPs encountered were drug omission (n=89, 21.2%), unnecessary drug (n=55, 13.1%) and wrong drug indication (n=55, 13.1%). Recommendations offered included; Addition of another drug to the therapy (n=87, 20.7%), rectification of incomplete prescriptions (n=85, 20.2%), change of drug or dosage (n=67, 16.0%), and discontinuation of the offending drug (n=59, 14.0%). A total of 389 (93%) out of 420 of the recommendations were accepted. In all, 50.4% (212) of the problematic prescriptions were changed and dispensed, 22.2% (89) were clarified and dispensed, while wrong identities were corrected in 11.7% (49). However, 7.5% (30) prescriptions were dispensed as prescribed, 5.2% (21) were not dispensed, and 3% (12) were unresolved. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that pharmacists-initiated interventions can ameliorate DTPs in patients receiving ART given the high intervention acceptance rate recorded. The implication of this finding is that pharmacists with requisite training in HIV pharmacotherapy are an excellent resource in detecting and minimizing the effect of antiretroviral drug-related errors.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4482846
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Centro de Investigaciones y Publicaciones Farmaceuticas
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-44828462015-06-30 Pattern of drug therapy problems and interventions in ambulatory patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in Nigeria Ojeh, Victor B. Naima, Nasir Abah, Isaac O. Falang, Kakjing D. Lucy, Ogwuche London, Ibrahim Dady, Christiana Agaba, Patricia Agbaji, Oche Pharm Pract (Granada) Original Research OBJECTIVES: We describe the frequency and types of drug therapy problems (DTPs), and interventions carried out to resolve them, among a cohort of HIV-infected patients on ART in Jos, Nigeria. METHODS: A prospective pharmacists’ intervention study was conducted between January and August 2012 at the outpatient HIV clinic of the Jos University Teaching Hospital (JUTH). Pharmacists identified DTPs and made recommendations to resolve them. The main outcome measures were number of DTPs encountered, interventions proposed and acceptance rate of recommendations. RESULTS: A total of 42,416 prescriptions were dispensed to 9339 patients during the eight months study. A total of 420 interventions (Intervention rate of 1 per 100 prescriptions) were made to resolve DTPs in 401 (4.3%) patients with a mean age of 41 (SD=10) years, and made up of 73% females. DTPs encountered were drug omission (n=89, 21.2%), unnecessary drug (n=55, 13.1%) and wrong drug indication (n=55, 13.1%). Recommendations offered included; Addition of another drug to the therapy (n=87, 20.7%), rectification of incomplete prescriptions (n=85, 20.2%), change of drug or dosage (n=67, 16.0%), and discontinuation of the offending drug (n=59, 14.0%). A total of 389 (93%) out of 420 of the recommendations were accepted. In all, 50.4% (212) of the problematic prescriptions were changed and dispensed, 22.2% (89) were clarified and dispensed, while wrong identities were corrected in 11.7% (49). However, 7.5% (30) prescriptions were dispensed as prescribed, 5.2% (21) were not dispensed, and 3% (12) were unresolved. CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that pharmacists-initiated interventions can ameliorate DTPs in patients receiving ART given the high intervention acceptance rate recorded. The implication of this finding is that pharmacists with requisite training in HIV pharmacotherapy are an excellent resource in detecting and minimizing the effect of antiretroviral drug-related errors. Centro de Investigaciones y Publicaciones Farmaceuticas 2015 2015-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4482846/ /pubmed/26131046 Text en Copyright: © Pharmacy Practice http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Ojeh, Victor B.
Naima, Nasir
Abah, Isaac O.
Falang, Kakjing D.
Lucy, Ogwuche
London, Ibrahim
Dady, Christiana
Agaba, Patricia
Agbaji, Oche
Pattern of drug therapy problems and interventions in ambulatory patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in Nigeria
title Pattern of drug therapy problems and interventions in ambulatory patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in Nigeria
title_full Pattern of drug therapy problems and interventions in ambulatory patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in Nigeria
title_fullStr Pattern of drug therapy problems and interventions in ambulatory patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Pattern of drug therapy problems and interventions in ambulatory patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in Nigeria
title_short Pattern of drug therapy problems and interventions in ambulatory patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in Nigeria
title_sort pattern of drug therapy problems and interventions in ambulatory patients receiving antiretroviral therapy in nigeria
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4482846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26131046
work_keys_str_mv AT ojehvictorb patternofdrugtherapyproblemsandinterventionsinambulatorypatientsreceivingantiretroviraltherapyinnigeria
AT naimanasir patternofdrugtherapyproblemsandinterventionsinambulatorypatientsreceivingantiretroviraltherapyinnigeria
AT abahisaaco patternofdrugtherapyproblemsandinterventionsinambulatorypatientsreceivingantiretroviraltherapyinnigeria
AT falangkakjingd patternofdrugtherapyproblemsandinterventionsinambulatorypatientsreceivingantiretroviraltherapyinnigeria
AT lucyogwuche patternofdrugtherapyproblemsandinterventionsinambulatorypatientsreceivingantiretroviraltherapyinnigeria
AT londonibrahim patternofdrugtherapyproblemsandinterventionsinambulatorypatientsreceivingantiretroviraltherapyinnigeria
AT dadychristiana patternofdrugtherapyproblemsandinterventionsinambulatorypatientsreceivingantiretroviraltherapyinnigeria
AT agabapatricia patternofdrugtherapyproblemsandinterventionsinambulatorypatientsreceivingantiretroviraltherapyinnigeria
AT agbajioche patternofdrugtherapyproblemsandinterventionsinambulatorypatientsreceivingantiretroviraltherapyinnigeria