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Nurse-led medicines’ monitoring in care homes, implementing the Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile improvement initiative for mental health medicines: An observational and interview study

INTRODUCTION: Preventable adverse effects of medicines often pass unnoticed, but lead to real harm. INTERVENTION: Nurse-led monitoring using the structured Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile identifies and addresses adverse effects of mental health medicines. OBJECTIVES: This study investigated th...

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Autores principales: Jordan, Sue, Banner, Timothy, Gabe-Walters, Marie, Mikhail, Jane M., Panes, Gerwyn, Round, Jeff, Snelgrove, Sherrill, Storey, Mel, Hughes, David
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6738583/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31509537
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220885
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author Jordan, Sue
Banner, Timothy
Gabe-Walters, Marie
Mikhail, Jane M.
Panes, Gerwyn
Round, Jeff
Snelgrove, Sherrill
Storey, Mel
Hughes, David
author_facet Jordan, Sue
Banner, Timothy
Gabe-Walters, Marie
Mikhail, Jane M.
Panes, Gerwyn
Round, Jeff
Snelgrove, Sherrill
Storey, Mel
Hughes, David
author_sort Jordan, Sue
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Preventable adverse effects of medicines often pass unnoticed, but lead to real harm. INTERVENTION: Nurse-led monitoring using the structured Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile identifies and addresses adverse effects of mental health medicines. OBJECTIVES: This study investigated the implementation and clinical impact of ADRe, and barriers to and facilitators of sustained utilisation in routine practice. METHODS: Administration of ADRe was observed for 30 residents prescribed mental health medicines in ten care homes. The study pharmacist reviewed completed ADRes against medication records. Policy context was explored in 30 interviews with service users, nurse managers and strategic leads in Wales. RESULTS: Residents were aged 60–95, and prescribed 1–17 (median 9 [interquartile range (IQR) 7–13]) medicines. ADRe identified a median of 18 [IQR 11.5–23] problems per resident and nurses made 2 [1–2] changes to care per resident. For example: falls were reported for 9 residents, and care was modified for 5; pain was identified in 8 residents, and alleviated for 7; all 6 residents recognised as dyspnoeic were referred to prescribers. Nurses referred 17 of 30 residents to prescribers. Pharmacists recommended review for all 30. Doubts about administering ADRe, sometimes expressed by people who had not yet used it, diminished as it became familiar. ADRe was needed to bridge communication between resident, nurses and prescribers. When barriers of time, complacency, and doctors’ non-availability were overcome, reporting with ADRe made prescribers more likely to heed nurses’ concerns regarding residents’ welfare. Clinical gains were facilitated by one-to-one time, staff-resident relationships, and unification of documentation. IMPLICATIONS: To our knowledge, ADRe is the only instrument that brings a full account of patients’ problems to medication reviews. This juxtaposition of signs and symptoms against prescriptions facilitates dose adjustments and de-prescribing and leads to: reduced pain and sedation; early identification of problems linked to ADRs, such as falls; and timely medication reviews e.g. for dyspnoea.
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spelling pubmed-67385832019-09-20 Nurse-led medicines’ monitoring in care homes, implementing the Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile improvement initiative for mental health medicines: An observational and interview study Jordan, Sue Banner, Timothy Gabe-Walters, Marie Mikhail, Jane M. Panes, Gerwyn Round, Jeff Snelgrove, Sherrill Storey, Mel Hughes, David PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Preventable adverse effects of medicines often pass unnoticed, but lead to real harm. INTERVENTION: Nurse-led monitoring using the structured Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile identifies and addresses adverse effects of mental health medicines. OBJECTIVES: This study investigated the implementation and clinical impact of ADRe, and barriers to and facilitators of sustained utilisation in routine practice. METHODS: Administration of ADRe was observed for 30 residents prescribed mental health medicines in ten care homes. The study pharmacist reviewed completed ADRes against medication records. Policy context was explored in 30 interviews with service users, nurse managers and strategic leads in Wales. RESULTS: Residents were aged 60–95, and prescribed 1–17 (median 9 [interquartile range (IQR) 7–13]) medicines. ADRe identified a median of 18 [IQR 11.5–23] problems per resident and nurses made 2 [1–2] changes to care per resident. For example: falls were reported for 9 residents, and care was modified for 5; pain was identified in 8 residents, and alleviated for 7; all 6 residents recognised as dyspnoeic were referred to prescribers. Nurses referred 17 of 30 residents to prescribers. Pharmacists recommended review for all 30. Doubts about administering ADRe, sometimes expressed by people who had not yet used it, diminished as it became familiar. ADRe was needed to bridge communication between resident, nurses and prescribers. When barriers of time, complacency, and doctors’ non-availability were overcome, reporting with ADRe made prescribers more likely to heed nurses’ concerns regarding residents’ welfare. Clinical gains were facilitated by one-to-one time, staff-resident relationships, and unification of documentation. IMPLICATIONS: To our knowledge, ADRe is the only instrument that brings a full account of patients’ problems to medication reviews. This juxtaposition of signs and symptoms against prescriptions facilitates dose adjustments and de-prescribing and leads to: reduced pain and sedation; early identification of problems linked to ADRs, such as falls; and timely medication reviews e.g. for dyspnoea. Public Library of Science 2019-09-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6738583/ /pubmed/31509537 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220885 Text en © 2019 Jordan et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jordan, Sue
Banner, Timothy
Gabe-Walters, Marie
Mikhail, Jane M.
Panes, Gerwyn
Round, Jeff
Snelgrove, Sherrill
Storey, Mel
Hughes, David
Nurse-led medicines’ monitoring in care homes, implementing the Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile improvement initiative for mental health medicines: An observational and interview study
title Nurse-led medicines’ monitoring in care homes, implementing the Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile improvement initiative for mental health medicines: An observational and interview study
title_full Nurse-led medicines’ monitoring in care homes, implementing the Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile improvement initiative for mental health medicines: An observational and interview study
title_fullStr Nurse-led medicines’ monitoring in care homes, implementing the Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile improvement initiative for mental health medicines: An observational and interview study
title_full_unstemmed Nurse-led medicines’ monitoring in care homes, implementing the Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile improvement initiative for mental health medicines: An observational and interview study
title_short Nurse-led medicines’ monitoring in care homes, implementing the Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile improvement initiative for mental health medicines: An observational and interview study
title_sort nurse-led medicines’ monitoring in care homes, implementing the adverse drug reaction (adre) profile improvement initiative for mental health medicines: an observational and interview study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6738583/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31509537
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220885
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