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Negotiating the polypharmacy paradox: a video-reflexive ethnography study of polypharmacy and its practices in primary care

BACKGROUND: Polypharmacy is an important safety concern. Medication reviews are recommended for patients affected by polypharmacy, but little is known about how they are conducted, nor how clinicians make sense of them. We used video-reflexive ethnography (VRE) to: illuminate how reviews are conduct...

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Autores principales: Swinglehurst, Deborah, Hogger, Lucie, Fudge, Nina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9985753/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36854488
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjqs-2022-014963
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author Swinglehurst, Deborah
Hogger, Lucie
Fudge, Nina
author_facet Swinglehurst, Deborah
Hogger, Lucie
Fudge, Nina
author_sort Swinglehurst, Deborah
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Polypharmacy is an important safety concern. Medication reviews are recommended for patients affected by polypharmacy, but little is known about how they are conducted, nor how clinicians make sense of them. We used video-reflexive ethnography (VRE) to: illuminate how reviews are conducted; elicit professional dialogue and concerns about polypharmacy; invite new transferable understandings of polypharmacy and its management. METHODS: We conducted 422 hours of fieldwork (participant observation), filmed 18 consultations between clinicians and patients receiving 10 or more regular items of medication (so-called ‘higher risk’ polypharmacy) and played short clips of film footage to 34 participants (general practitioners, nurses, clinical pharmacists, practice managers) in seven audio-recorded reflexive workshops. Our analysis focused on ‘moments of potentiation’ and traced clinicians’ shifting understandings of their practices. RESULTS: Participants rarely referenced biomedical aspects of prescribing (eg, drug-drug interactions, ‘Numbers Needed to Treat/Harm’) focussing instead on polypharmacy as an emotional and relational challenge. Clinicians initially denigrated their medication review work as mundane. Through VRE they reframed their work as complex, identifying polypharmacy as a delicate matter to negotiate. In patients with multimorbidity and polypharmacy it was difficult to disentangle medication review from other aspects of patients’ medical care. Such conditions of complexity presented clinicians with competing professional obligations which were difficult to reconcile. Medication review was identified as an ongoing process, rather than a discrete ‘one-off’ activity. Meaningful progress towards tackling polypharmacy was only possible through small, incremental, carefully supported changes in which both patient and clinician negotiated a sharing of responsibility, best supported by continuity of care. CONCLUSIONS: Supporting acceptable, feasible and meaningful progress towards addressing problematic polypharmacy may require shifts in how medication reviews are conceptualised. Responsible decision-making under conditions of such complexity and uncertainty depends crucially on the affective or emotional quality of the clinician-patient relationship.
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spelling pubmed-99857532023-03-06 Negotiating the polypharmacy paradox: a video-reflexive ethnography study of polypharmacy and its practices in primary care Swinglehurst, Deborah Hogger, Lucie Fudge, Nina BMJ Qual Saf Original Research BACKGROUND: Polypharmacy is an important safety concern. Medication reviews are recommended for patients affected by polypharmacy, but little is known about how they are conducted, nor how clinicians make sense of them. We used video-reflexive ethnography (VRE) to: illuminate how reviews are conducted; elicit professional dialogue and concerns about polypharmacy; invite new transferable understandings of polypharmacy and its management. METHODS: We conducted 422 hours of fieldwork (participant observation), filmed 18 consultations between clinicians and patients receiving 10 or more regular items of medication (so-called ‘higher risk’ polypharmacy) and played short clips of film footage to 34 participants (general practitioners, nurses, clinical pharmacists, practice managers) in seven audio-recorded reflexive workshops. Our analysis focused on ‘moments of potentiation’ and traced clinicians’ shifting understandings of their practices. RESULTS: Participants rarely referenced biomedical aspects of prescribing (eg, drug-drug interactions, ‘Numbers Needed to Treat/Harm’) focussing instead on polypharmacy as an emotional and relational challenge. Clinicians initially denigrated their medication review work as mundane. Through VRE they reframed their work as complex, identifying polypharmacy as a delicate matter to negotiate. In patients with multimorbidity and polypharmacy it was difficult to disentangle medication review from other aspects of patients’ medical care. Such conditions of complexity presented clinicians with competing professional obligations which were difficult to reconcile. Medication review was identified as an ongoing process, rather than a discrete ‘one-off’ activity. Meaningful progress towards tackling polypharmacy was only possible through small, incremental, carefully supported changes in which both patient and clinician negotiated a sharing of responsibility, best supported by continuity of care. CONCLUSIONS: Supporting acceptable, feasible and meaningful progress towards addressing problematic polypharmacy may require shifts in how medication reviews are conceptualised. Responsible decision-making under conditions of such complexity and uncertainty depends crucially on the affective or emotional quality of the clinician-patient relationship. BMJ Publishing Group 2023-03 2022-09-02 /pmc/articles/PMC9985753/ /pubmed/36854488 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjqs-2022-014963 Text en © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2023. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to copy, redistribute, remix, transform and build upon this work for any purpose, provided the original work is properly cited, a link to the licence is given, and indication of whether changes were made. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Original Research
Swinglehurst, Deborah
Hogger, Lucie
Fudge, Nina
Negotiating the polypharmacy paradox: a video-reflexive ethnography study of polypharmacy and its practices in primary care
title Negotiating the polypharmacy paradox: a video-reflexive ethnography study of polypharmacy and its practices in primary care
title_full Negotiating the polypharmacy paradox: a video-reflexive ethnography study of polypharmacy and its practices in primary care
title_fullStr Negotiating the polypharmacy paradox: a video-reflexive ethnography study of polypharmacy and its practices in primary care
title_full_unstemmed Negotiating the polypharmacy paradox: a video-reflexive ethnography study of polypharmacy and its practices in primary care
title_short Negotiating the polypharmacy paradox: a video-reflexive ethnography study of polypharmacy and its practices in primary care
title_sort negotiating the polypharmacy paradox: a video-reflexive ethnography study of polypharmacy and its practices in primary care
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9985753/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36854488
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjqs-2022-014963
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