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Oral anticoagulants (OACs - warfarin, dabigatran, rivaroxaban, apixaban and edoxaban) are the very top cause of serious drug-related harm. More than 7 million prescriptions are dispensed annually for oral anticoagulants (OAC) in Canada, with more than 340,000 elderly recipients in the Ontario Drug Benefit Program alone. Because of their very high and chronic utilization, their large benefit in lowering important clinical events (stroke, clots, death) and their high potential for major harm (primarily bleeds, which can be fatal), OACs are the highest priority for improving medication safe and effective use. The early period after hospital discharge is clearly high risk, with three times the usual rate of major bleeds compared with later.
Patients and families frequently note confusion about their medications after leaving the hospital due to errors or lack of detailed communication to their health care team at the time of discharge. The confusion, errors, and lack of communication are highly associated with lack of adherence to medications and resulting worse health outcomes. The combination of waste of medication and bad outcomes that result from medication errors, are estimated to cost our health care system several billion dollars annually. Since our leading economists are declaring health care to be unsustainable in its current delivery forms, it is time to find and evaluate more cost-effective ways to improve anticoagulation safety. The investigators will do this by structuring discharge medication assessment, with more expert management, formal written and verbal handovers to the patients, their family and their hospital and community doctors, pharmacists and home care; follow-up by virtual visits after discharge, and coordinate advice and communication to extend access to and reduce the cost of expert guidance. The investigators expect that this intervention will decrease anticoagulant-related adverse events and improve ratings of the coordination of care. If this occurs, the investigators will develop a business plan for regions, provinces and territories to scale up the intervention to a national level.
Full description
Design: Randomized controlled pilot trial, two parallel groups, blinded outcome assessment.
Eligibility Criteria: Inclusion criteria include a) adult patients within a day of their hospital discharge from internal medicine services with a discharge prescription for an OAC intended to be taken for at least 4 weeks, b) discharge is to home or to a congregant setting such as retirement home where the patient manages their own medications, c) English-speaking and d) capable of providing informed consent. Ability to consent will be measured by the COACHeD Capacity to Consent test, requiring a score of 14 or more. If the patient does not pass, a close caregiver (defined as a family member in daily contact with the patient and involved in their medication supervision), will be invited to provide consent on the patient's behalf by signing a caregiver consent form.
Patients will be excluded if they are less than 18 years of age, have an expected lifespan of less than 3 months, will be discharged to long term care or other institution where medications are controlled by staff, or decline informed consent.
Intervention: Intervention patients will receive:
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion criteria include a) adult patients within a day of their hospital discharge from internal medicine services with a discharge prescription for an OAC intended to be taken for at least 4 weeks, b) discharge is to home or to a congregant setting such as retirement home where the patient manages their own medications, c) English-speaking and d) capable of providing informed consent. Ability to consent will be measured by the COACHeD Capacity to Consent test, requiring a score of 14 or more. If the patient does not pass, a close caregiver (defined as a family member in daily contact with the patient and involved in their medication supervision), will be invited to provide consent on the patient's behalf by signing a caregiver consent form.
Patients will be excluded if they are less than 18 years of age, have an expected lifespan of less than 3 months, will be discharged to long term care or other institution where medications are controlled by staff, or decline informed consent.
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56 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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