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Impact of Medication Review by Community Pharmacists

M

Monash University Malaysia

Status

Completed

Conditions

Aging

Treatments

Other: Medication review

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aging population size has been enlarging globally. A higher number of older adults means a higher number of medication use. It is estimated that older adults are the largest medication consumers.That would result in various medication use problems which provide a link between polypharmacy, inappropriate medication, and deprescribing.[2] Primary health care providers especially community pharmacists are often the first point of healthcare towards older adults.[3] Various interventions are being carried out by community pharmacies to determine an optimal outcome on medication usage.

Medication review intervention is a clinical process where a pharmacist reviews a patient's medication, identifies any drug-related problems and suggests strategies to reduce the medication use problems. Medication review is being utilized in various countries especially in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD )regions ie Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America, and the pharmacist were remunerated for the service. Although medication review is widely searched intervention globally, the scope for intervention is lacking in low and middle-income countries.

Community pharmacy is regarded as the first point of care of primary health care in a community for older adults. A systemic review search on community pharmacist-led intervention among the aging population has demonstrated medication adherence improvement outcomes. Consequently, community pharmacists can reduce medication use problems in different settings in the community in various ways and contribute to the patients' overall well-being and health-related quality of life.

There is a lack of information in Malaysia due to the fragmented health care system where there is no continuity of care between the public and private sectors. During this pandemic outbreak, when most countries suffer critical health care points, much effort and pharmaceutical care should be delivered towards older adults to reduce the current burden. This study assesses the feasibility of medication review for older adults at the community pharmacy level and identifies any medication-related problems in Penang state. The significance of this study is improving medication use among older adults at a primary care level and will probably upgrade the quality of the Malaysian health care system by providing some program and policy level solutions towards the problems.

Full description

  • Before the initiation of the study, the community pharmacy involved or volunteered from intervention groups in Penang, Malaysia will undergo half-day training on a structured medication review plan and the study process.
  • Control groups pharmacies will undergo a briefing of the study process only.
  • A validated survey MedUseQ questionnaire will be administered to each respondent from both intervention and control groups prior to the intervention.
  • Medication review intervention will then be performed only for the intervention group.
  • A pharmacist will review the medications of those in the intervention group and tried to resolve any drug-related problems encountered by the participants. In addition, the pharmacist will conduct a question-answer session with the participants to enhance older adults' knowledge and awareness of their medications.
  • Immediate post-intervention knowledge questions related to their medications name and dose, timing and interval of dose, medication indication, and possible side effects.
  • Intervention groups will be followed up at two months and four months through a phone call or face to face. Follow-up will include detecting any medication-related problems among participants, updating their current medication regime, and to further clarifying any query from them.
  • Meanwhile, the control group will not be going under follow-up. Only the number of drug related problems will be recorded
  • All participants will then be followed six months of post-intervention and will be given again the MedUseQ survey to compare the difference between baseline and post-intervention.
  • Data collection will be conducted at baseline and six months after the intervention.

Enrollment

27 patients

Sex

All

Ages

60+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients above 60 years old Patients who have chronic disease ie diabetes, hypertension, cardiovascular
  • Patients who have been patronizing the pharmacy for the purchase of at least one prescription medication for the past three months.
  • Patients be able to converse, read and understand the Malay language or English language.
  • Access to a telephone or mobile phone or internet
  • The patients must understand the study process, agree to participate in this study, and sign the informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient who are unable to converse, read and understand Malay or English language
  • Patients who unable to give their consent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

27 participants in 2 patient groups

Medication Review
Experimental group
Description:
The intervention group will receive medication review intervention which includes reviewing older adults' medications and identifying any drug-related problems.
Treatment:
Other: Medication review
Standard Care
No Intervention group
Description:
The standard care includes the current existing care provided to patients in the community pharmacy.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ali Blebil; Christina Christopher

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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