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The overall objective of the myCare Start-I project is to adapt, implement and evaluate the myCare Start service within the Swiss pharmacy-physician network to enhance medication adherence during the initiation of a new long-term treatment. The study will use an implementation science approach. The myCare Start service is based on the New Medicine Service (NMS) that was developed in the United Kingdom.
Full description
Phase A:
To conduct a contextual analysis of the current Swiss primary care ecosystem as related to pharmacy-physician interprofessional health services for patients with long-term diseases (i.e., contextual analysis).
To engage key stakeholders within the Swiss primary care ecosystem to contribute to the co-creation of a Swiss interprofessional myCare Start service (i.e., stakeholder involvement).
To design a contextually adapted myCare Start for use within Swiss community practice using contextually appropriate implementation strategies (i.e., intervention development/selecting implementation strategies).
To conduct feasibility testing on the contextually adapted intervention and implementation strategies and to develop an implementation research logic model (i.e., feasibility testing).
Phase B: Please note Phase B will be carried out at a later date with further ethics committee approval.
To implement a contextually adapted Swiss myCare Start intervention in the pharmacy-physician network community and evaluate it in terms of medication adherence and cost-effectiveness outcomes.
To evaluate implementation outcomes and the implementation pathway of myCare Start.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Phase A: contextual analysis
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Phase B: hybrid type 2 effectiveness-implementation study
Patients are eligible for the myCare Start-I phase B study if :
Exclusion criteria:
• Patients participating or having participated in an education program about their disease or treatment in the last 3 months, led by healthcare providers such as physicians, nurses, pharmacists or other (e.g. education provided by nurses for type I diabetes patients).
myCare Start definition of a new medication:
A new medication is a medication that has not been previously dispensed to the patient. This includes one or more new medications for a new diagnosis and or new medications for pre-existing diagnosis of a long-term condition.
Operational definition of a new medication:
The new active ingredient can be part of a combo preparation (e.g. a diuretic added to an ACE inhibitor into the same preparation)
Patient has had no change in active ingredient but has an important change in treatment administration, such as:
The following change is not considered as medication initiation:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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