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A TRIAL TO IMPROVE MEDICATION SAFETY IN OLDER ADULTS: RECRUITMENT CHALLENGES HAVE GENERALIZABILITY IMPLICATIONS

For older adults, the transition from hospital to home is a high-risk period for adverse drug events, functional decline, and hospital readmission. Randomized trials of interventions to improve this transition must recruit potential subjects immediately after hospital discharge, when people are reco...

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Autores principales: Anzuoni, Kathryn, Field, Terry, Mazor, Kathleen, Zhou, Yanhua, Konola, Timothy, Kapoor, Alok, Garber, Lawrence, Gurwitz, Jerry
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6841060/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.2611
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author Anzuoni, Kathryn
Field, Terry
Mazor, Kathleen
Zhou, Yanhua
Konola, Timothy
Kapoor, Alok
Garber, Lawrence
Gurwitz, Jerry
author_facet Anzuoni, Kathryn
Field, Terry
Mazor, Kathleen
Zhou, Yanhua
Konola, Timothy
Kapoor, Alok
Garber, Lawrence
Gurwitz, Jerry
author_sort Anzuoni, Kathryn
collection PubMed
description For older adults, the transition from hospital to home is a high-risk period for adverse drug events, functional decline, and hospital readmission. Randomized trials of interventions to improve this transition must recruit potential subjects immediately after hospital discharge, when people are recovering and tired. Within a randomized trial assessing the impact of a pharmacist home visit to provide medication assistance immediately post-discharge, we determined whether individuals who enrolled were comparable to those who were invited but did not enroll, and described reasons for not enrolling. Individuals ≥50 years of age discharged from the hospital and prescribed a high-risk medication were eligible. We attempted to recruit individuals by phone within 3 days of discharge, and recorded reasons for not enrolling. Of 3,606 eligible individuals reached, 3,147 (87%) declined, 361 (10%) were enrolled, and 98 (3%) were initially recruited but did not complete a consent form. Individuals ≥80 years of age (odds ratio 0.45, CI 0.25, 0.78) and those with an assigned visiting nurse (odds ratio 0.64, CI 0.48, 0.85) were least likely to enroll. Among those who provided a reason for declining (2,473) the most common reason given was the belief they did not need medication assistance (22%). An additional 332 (13%) declined because they were receiving visiting nurse services. Recruiting older adults recently discharged from the hospital is difficult and may under-enroll the oldest individuals, limiting the ability to generalize findings across older patient populations. Researchers planning RCTs among newly discharged older adults may need creative approaches to overcome resistance.
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spelling pubmed-68410602019-11-15 A TRIAL TO IMPROVE MEDICATION SAFETY IN OLDER ADULTS: RECRUITMENT CHALLENGES HAVE GENERALIZABILITY IMPLICATIONS Anzuoni, Kathryn Field, Terry Mazor, Kathleen Zhou, Yanhua Konola, Timothy Kapoor, Alok Garber, Lawrence Gurwitz, Jerry Innov Aging Session 3355 (Poster) For older adults, the transition from hospital to home is a high-risk period for adverse drug events, functional decline, and hospital readmission. Randomized trials of interventions to improve this transition must recruit potential subjects immediately after hospital discharge, when people are recovering and tired. Within a randomized trial assessing the impact of a pharmacist home visit to provide medication assistance immediately post-discharge, we determined whether individuals who enrolled were comparable to those who were invited but did not enroll, and described reasons for not enrolling. Individuals ≥50 years of age discharged from the hospital and prescribed a high-risk medication were eligible. We attempted to recruit individuals by phone within 3 days of discharge, and recorded reasons for not enrolling. Of 3,606 eligible individuals reached, 3,147 (87%) declined, 361 (10%) were enrolled, and 98 (3%) were initially recruited but did not complete a consent form. Individuals ≥80 years of age (odds ratio 0.45, CI 0.25, 0.78) and those with an assigned visiting nurse (odds ratio 0.64, CI 0.48, 0.85) were least likely to enroll. Among those who provided a reason for declining (2,473) the most common reason given was the belief they did not need medication assistance (22%). An additional 332 (13%) declined because they were receiving visiting nurse services. Recruiting older adults recently discharged from the hospital is difficult and may under-enroll the oldest individuals, limiting the ability to generalize findings across older patient populations. Researchers planning RCTs among newly discharged older adults may need creative approaches to overcome resistance. Oxford University Press 2019-11-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6841060/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.2611 Text en © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. 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 reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Session 3355 (Poster)
Anzuoni, Kathryn
Field, Terry
Mazor, Kathleen
Zhou, Yanhua
Konola, Timothy
Kapoor, Alok
Garber, Lawrence
Gurwitz, Jerry
A TRIAL TO IMPROVE MEDICATION SAFETY IN OLDER ADULTS: RECRUITMENT CHALLENGES HAVE GENERALIZABILITY IMPLICATIONS
title A TRIAL TO IMPROVE MEDICATION SAFETY IN OLDER ADULTS: RECRUITMENT CHALLENGES HAVE GENERALIZABILITY IMPLICATIONS
title_full A TRIAL TO IMPROVE MEDICATION SAFETY IN OLDER ADULTS: RECRUITMENT CHALLENGES HAVE GENERALIZABILITY IMPLICATIONS
title_fullStr A TRIAL TO IMPROVE MEDICATION SAFETY IN OLDER ADULTS: RECRUITMENT CHALLENGES HAVE GENERALIZABILITY IMPLICATIONS
title_full_unstemmed A TRIAL TO IMPROVE MEDICATION SAFETY IN OLDER ADULTS: RECRUITMENT CHALLENGES HAVE GENERALIZABILITY IMPLICATIONS
title_short A TRIAL TO IMPROVE MEDICATION SAFETY IN OLDER ADULTS: RECRUITMENT CHALLENGES HAVE GENERALIZABILITY IMPLICATIONS
title_sort trial to improve medication safety in older adults: recruitment challenges have generalizability implications
topic Session 3355 (Poster)
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6841060/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igz038.2611
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