Cargando…

Systematic review and narrative synthesis of pharmacist provided medicines optimisation services in care homes for older people to inform the development of a generic training or accreditation process

OBJECTIVES: To develop a training programme to enable pharmacists with prescribing rights to assume responsibility for the provision of pharmaceutical care within care homes, a systematic review and narrative synthesis was undertaken to identify reported approaches to training pharmacists and use th...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Wright, David John, Maskrey, Vivienne, Blyth, Annie, Norris, Nigel, Alldred, David P., Bond, Christine M., Desborough, James, Hughes, Carmel M., Holland, Richard Charles
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7317947/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31713918
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijpp.12591
_version_ 1783550744982454272
author Wright, David John
Maskrey, Vivienne
Blyth, Annie
Norris, Nigel
Alldred, David P.
Bond, Christine M.
Desborough, James
Hughes, Carmel M.
Holland, Richard Charles
author_facet Wright, David John
Maskrey, Vivienne
Blyth, Annie
Norris, Nigel
Alldred, David P.
Bond, Christine M.
Desborough, James
Hughes, Carmel M.
Holland, Richard Charles
author_sort Wright, David John
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: To develop a training programme to enable pharmacists with prescribing rights to assume responsibility for the provision of pharmaceutical care within care homes, a systematic review and narrative synthesis was undertaken to identify reported approaches to training pharmacists and use this literature to identify potential knowledge requirements. METHODS: A PROSPERO‐registered systematic review was performed using key search terms for care homes, pharmacist, education, training and pharmaceutical care. Papers reporting primary research focussed on care of the older person within the care home setting were included. No restrictions were placed on methodology. Two researchers independently reviewed titles, abstracts and papers. Agreement on inclusion was reached through consensus. Data on titles, training and activities undertaken were extracted and knowledge requirements identified. Findings were synthesised and reported narratively. KEY FINDINGS: Fifty‐nine papers were included, most of which were uncontrolled service evaluations. Four papers reported an accreditation process for the pharmacist. Thirteen papers reported providing tools or specific training on a single topic to pharmacists. The main clinical and therapeutic areas of activity (requiring codified knowledge) were dementia, pain, antipsychotic and cardiovascular medication. Provision of pharmaceutical care, effective multidisciplinary working and care home staff training represented the main areas of practical knowledge. CONCLUSIONS: Information regarding training and accreditation processes for care home pharmacists is limited. This study provides insight into potential codified and practical knowledge requirements for pharmacists assuming responsibility for the provision of pharmaceutical care within care homes. Further work involving stakeholders is required to identify the cultural knowledge requirements and to develop a training and accreditation process.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7317947
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-73179472020-06-29 Systematic review and narrative synthesis of pharmacist provided medicines optimisation services in care homes for older people to inform the development of a generic training or accreditation process Wright, David John Maskrey, Vivienne Blyth, Annie Norris, Nigel Alldred, David P. Bond, Christine M. Desborough, James Hughes, Carmel M. Holland, Richard Charles Int J Pharm Pract Research Paper OBJECTIVES: To develop a training programme to enable pharmacists with prescribing rights to assume responsibility for the provision of pharmaceutical care within care homes, a systematic review and narrative synthesis was undertaken to identify reported approaches to training pharmacists and use this literature to identify potential knowledge requirements. METHODS: A PROSPERO‐registered systematic review was performed using key search terms for care homes, pharmacist, education, training and pharmaceutical care. Papers reporting primary research focussed on care of the older person within the care home setting were included. No restrictions were placed on methodology. Two researchers independently reviewed titles, abstracts and papers. Agreement on inclusion was reached through consensus. Data on titles, training and activities undertaken were extracted and knowledge requirements identified. Findings were synthesised and reported narratively. KEY FINDINGS: Fifty‐nine papers were included, most of which were uncontrolled service evaluations. Four papers reported an accreditation process for the pharmacist. Thirteen papers reported providing tools or specific training on a single topic to pharmacists. The main clinical and therapeutic areas of activity (requiring codified knowledge) were dementia, pain, antipsychotic and cardiovascular medication. Provision of pharmaceutical care, effective multidisciplinary working and care home staff training represented the main areas of practical knowledge. CONCLUSIONS: Information regarding training and accreditation processes for care home pharmacists is limited. This study provides insight into potential codified and practical knowledge requirements for pharmacists assuming responsibility for the provision of pharmaceutical care within care homes. Further work involving stakeholders is required to identify the cultural knowledge requirements and to develop a training and accreditation process. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-11-12 2020-06 /pmc/articles/PMC7317947/ /pubmed/31713918 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijpp.12591 Text en © 2019 The Authors. International Journal of Pharmacy Practice published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Royal Pharmaceutical Society This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Wright, David John
Maskrey, Vivienne
Blyth, Annie
Norris, Nigel
Alldred, David P.
Bond, Christine M.
Desborough, James
Hughes, Carmel M.
Holland, Richard Charles
Systematic review and narrative synthesis of pharmacist provided medicines optimisation services in care homes for older people to inform the development of a generic training or accreditation process
title Systematic review and narrative synthesis of pharmacist provided medicines optimisation services in care homes for older people to inform the development of a generic training or accreditation process
title_full Systematic review and narrative synthesis of pharmacist provided medicines optimisation services in care homes for older people to inform the development of a generic training or accreditation process
title_fullStr Systematic review and narrative synthesis of pharmacist provided medicines optimisation services in care homes for older people to inform the development of a generic training or accreditation process
title_full_unstemmed Systematic review and narrative synthesis of pharmacist provided medicines optimisation services in care homes for older people to inform the development of a generic training or accreditation process
title_short Systematic review and narrative synthesis of pharmacist provided medicines optimisation services in care homes for older people to inform the development of a generic training or accreditation process
title_sort systematic review and narrative synthesis of pharmacist provided medicines optimisation services in care homes for older people to inform the development of a generic training or accreditation process
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7317947/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31713918
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ijpp.12591
work_keys_str_mv AT wrightdavidjohn systematicreviewandnarrativesynthesisofpharmacistprovidedmedicinesoptimisationservicesincarehomesforolderpeopletoinformthedevelopmentofagenerictrainingoraccreditationprocess
AT maskreyvivienne systematicreviewandnarrativesynthesisofpharmacistprovidedmedicinesoptimisationservicesincarehomesforolderpeopletoinformthedevelopmentofagenerictrainingoraccreditationprocess
AT blythannie systematicreviewandnarrativesynthesisofpharmacistprovidedmedicinesoptimisationservicesincarehomesforolderpeopletoinformthedevelopmentofagenerictrainingoraccreditationprocess
AT norrisnigel systematicreviewandnarrativesynthesisofpharmacistprovidedmedicinesoptimisationservicesincarehomesforolderpeopletoinformthedevelopmentofagenerictrainingoraccreditationprocess
AT alldreddavidp systematicreviewandnarrativesynthesisofpharmacistprovidedmedicinesoptimisationservicesincarehomesforolderpeopletoinformthedevelopmentofagenerictrainingoraccreditationprocess
AT bondchristinem systematicreviewandnarrativesynthesisofpharmacistprovidedmedicinesoptimisationservicesincarehomesforolderpeopletoinformthedevelopmentofagenerictrainingoraccreditationprocess
AT desboroughjames systematicreviewandnarrativesynthesisofpharmacistprovidedmedicinesoptimisationservicesincarehomesforolderpeopletoinformthedevelopmentofagenerictrainingoraccreditationprocess
AT hughescarmelm systematicreviewandnarrativesynthesisofpharmacistprovidedmedicinesoptimisationservicesincarehomesforolderpeopletoinformthedevelopmentofagenerictrainingoraccreditationprocess
AT hollandrichardcharles systematicreviewandnarrativesynthesisofpharmacistprovidedmedicinesoptimisationservicesincarehomesforolderpeopletoinformthedevelopmentofagenerictrainingoraccreditationprocess