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About
To describe the barriers and facilitators experienced by residents, health and social care staff, commissioners and regulators when managing medicines within care homes.
Full description
The prescribing of medicines is the most frequent health intervention in England. The administration or omission of medicines is not without risk and incidents involving medicines occur. The frequency of prescribing medicines increases with age and frailty. People living in care homes (with and without nursing) are generally older and more frail than similar groups in the community. Therefore, care homes and their staff need to be proficient and safe when administering medicines.
However, an under investigated area of prescribed medicines is the views of people living in care homes, health and social care staff, commissioners and regulator about managing medicines in care homes.
During the study a series of semi-structured interviews and focus groups will be undertaken. These focus groups will be held with people living in care homes (with and without nursing). Further interviews and focus groups will be held with health and social care staff, commissioners and regulators.
Care homes will be invited to provide copies of their current medicines monitoring tool. In addition, services supporting care homes including community pharmacies will also be invited to provide copies of their current medicines monitoring tools.
Analysis of conversations and monitoring tools made available to the study team will be undertaken and compared to published literature including grey literature.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Care homes
Residents who have capacity and an adequate understanding of written and verbal English to consent and participate of participating care homes.
Care home staff, including registered managers who have an adequate understanding of written and verbal English to consent and participate of participating care homes.
Visiting health and social care staff who support care homes in the study locality.
Commissioner and regulatory staff with oversight of care homes in the study locality.
Medicines monitoring tools used by participating
Exclusion criteria
Care homes registered with the regulator (CQC)
Care homes registered with the regulator (CQC)
Residents of participating care homes judged by staff to lack capacity, an adequate understanding of written and verbal English to consent and participate, too unwell or might find it distressing.
Staff in participating care homes who lack an adequate understanding of written and verbal English to consent and participate.
152 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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