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1.
Int J Clin Pract ; 69(1): 81-6, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24852483

ABSTRACT

AIMS: The aim of the study was to evaluate the impact of the ENDORSE study results on thromboprophylaxis prescribing patterns in medical patients attending the Emergency Department (ED) by assessing prescribing appropriateness at admission. METHODS: A cross-sectional, observational, descriptive study was designed and included all adult medical patients admitted from an ED between 20 November 2012 and 26 November 2012 at a large tertiary hospital. Patients to whom anticoagulants were prescribed for therapeutic purposes, patients admitted to Intensive Care Unit or maternity wards were excluded. Prescribing appropriateness was assessed using the Padua Prediction Score (ACCP 2012 guideline) for thromboembolic risk assessment and the NICE model to determine risk of bleeding. The primary end-point was the adequacy of thromboprophylaxis prescribed at the ED according to the ACCP 2012 guideline. RESULTS: A total of 393 patients were examined and 207 patients were included in the study (53.1% were male) with a median age of 75.3 years. The most common diagnosis at admission was related to a respiratory disease (41.1%). In 34.8% of the patients (72 patients), the recommendation of prophylaxis according to ACCP 2012 guideline did not match with the prophylaxis prescribed at admission. Reasons for non-concordance were undertreatment (14.5%) and overtreatment (20.3%). CONCLUSIONS: The adequacy of thromboprophylaxis in high risk patients for VTE has improved compared with the ENDORSE study. However, the percentage of patients with discordant prescriptions remains high. Despite the existence of treatment omissions, this percentage has been overcome by patients overtreated.


Subject(s)
Anticoagulants/therapeutic use , Practice Patterns, Physicians'/statistics & numerical data , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cross-Sectional Studies , Drug Utilization/statistics & numerical data , Emergency Service, Hospital , Female , Hospitalization/trends , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Thromboembolism/drug therapy , Thromboembolism/prevention & control , Venous Thrombosis/drug therapy , Venous Thrombosis/prevention & control
2.
Rev. calid. asist ; 29(1): 22-28, ene.-feb. 2014. tab, graf
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-119121

ABSTRACT

Introducción: Objetivo: conocer el porcentaje de prescripciones potencialmente inapropiadas según los criterios STOPP/START en los tratamientos ambulatorios de los pacientes mayores de 65 años que ingresan en una unidad de medicina interna, e identificar los errores de prescripción más frecuentes. Material y métodos: Estudio observacional prospectivo realizado entre octubre y diciembre de 2012. Variables registradas: edad, sexo, índice de comorbilidad de Charlson, motivo de ingreso y tratamiento farmacológico ambulatorio. Resultados: Se recogieron los datos de 131 pacientes (edad media 80,2 años; 58,8% varones, mediana del índice de comorbilidad de Charlson 2; media de medicamentos por paciente: 8,6). Principales motivos de ingreso: descompensación de insuficiencia cardiaca, infección respiratoria, exacerbación de EPOC, infección del tracto urinario, neumonía y síndrome constitucional. Se detectaron 121 prescripciones potencialmente inapropiadas en 73 pacientes (55,7%). Los criterios STOPP más frecuentes fueron las duplicidades terapéuticas. Los criterios START más frecuentes fueron la omisión de estatinas y antiagregantes plaquetarios en la prevención primaria del riesgo cardiovascular en pacientes con diabetes mellitus y al menos un factor de riesgo cardiovascular. Conclusiones: El porcentaje de pacientes con prescripciones inapropiadas encontrado es similar al obtenido en estudios semejantes. Más de la mitad de los pacientes ancianos presentaron al menos una prescripción inapropiada. Esto hace necesario una búsqueda conjunta de errores por exceso y por defecto en la prescripción de fármacos, con el fin de realizar una evaluación más completa de la práctica de prescripción e intentar conseguir la optimización de la terapéutica de los pacientes mayores, especialmente los más frágiles (AU)


Introduction: The aim of this study was to establish the percentage of potentially inappropriate prescriptions, according to STOPP/START criteria, in the ambulatory treatments of patients over65 years admitted to an internal medicine unit, and to identify the most common prescription errors. Material and methods: A prospective, observational study was performed between October and December 2012. The variable recorded were, age, gender, Charlson comorbidity index, reason for hospitalisation and pharmacological ambulatory treatment. Results: Data from 131 patients were collected (Mean age: 80.2 years; 58.8% male, mean Charlson comorbidity index: 2; mean number of medications per patient: 8.6). Main reasons for hospitalisation: decompensated heart failure, respiratory infection, exacerbated COPD, urinary tract infection, pneumonia, and unintended weight loss. There were 121 potentially inappropriate prescriptions detected in 73 patients (55.7%). The most common STOPP criteria were therapeutic duplicities. The most common START criteria were the omission of statins and antiplatelets in primary prevention for cardiovascular risk in patients with diabetes mellitus and at least one cardiovascular risk factor. Conclusions: The percentage of patients with inappropriate prescriptions was similar to those obtained in similar studies. Over 50% of elderly patients had at least one inappropriate prescription. This warrants a joint search for errors by excess and by default in the prescription of medications, with the aim of performing a more complete evaluation of prescription practice and to achieve optimization of therapy in elderly patients, especially the most fragile (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Medication Errors/statistics & numerical data , Drug Prescriptions/statistics & numerical data , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Aged/statistics & numerical data , Ambulatory Care/statistics & numerical data , Prospective Studies , Chronic Disease/drug therapy
3.
Rev Calid Asist ; 29(1): 22-8, 2014.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24161896

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The aim of this study was to establish the percentage of potentially inappropriate prescriptions, according to STOPP/START criteria, in the ambulatory treatments of patients over 65 years admitted to an internal medicine unit, and to identify the most common prescription errors. MATERIAL AND METHODS: A prospective, observational study was performed between October and December 2012. The variable recorded were,age, gender, Charlson comorbidity index, reason for hospitalisation and pharmacological ambulatory treatment. RESULTS: Data from 131 patients were collected (Mean age: 80.2 years; 58.8% male, mean Charlson comorbidity index: 2; mean number of medications per patient: 8.6). Main reasons for hospitalisation: decompensated heart failure, respiratory infection, exacerbated COPD, urinary tract infection, pneumonia, and unintended weight loss. There were 121 potentially inappropriate prescriptions detected in 73 patients (55.7%). The most common STOPP criteria were therapeutic duplicities. The most common START criteria were the omission of statins and antiplatelets in primary prevention for cardiovascular risk in patients with diabetes mellitus and at least one cardiovascular risk factor. CONCLUSIONS: The percentage of patients with inappropriate prescriptions was similar to those obtained in similar studies. Over 50% of elderly patients had at least one inappropriate prescription. This warrants a joint search for errors by excess and by default in the prescription of medications, with the aim of performing a more complete evaluation of prescription practice and to achieve optimization of therapy in elderly patients, especially the most fragile.


Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care/statistics & numerical data , Drug Prescriptions/statistics & numerical data , Drug Therapy, Computer-Assisted , Frail Elderly , Inappropriate Prescribing/statistics & numerical data , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Diagnosis-Related Groups , Drug Prescriptions/standards , Drug Utilization/statistics & numerical data , Female , Guideline Adherence , Hospitals, General/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, University/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Inappropriate Prescribing/prevention & control , Male , Medication Errors/prevention & control , Platelet Aggregation Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Polypharmacy , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Spain
4.
J Clin Pharm Ther ; 37(4): 459-63, 2012 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22211951

ABSTRACT

WHAT IS KNOWN AND OBJECTIVE: The validation of a method for recording pharmaceutical interventions measures the instrument's ability to provide consistent values when the same analysis is performed several times. Our aim was to validate the inter-rater reliability of the method used to record pharmaceutical interventions in our hospital. METHODS: We recorded interventions in a database, entering variables related to the patient, treatment and impact of the recommendation. We also recorded the type, cause and clinical significance of the negative outcome associated with use of the medicinal product (NOM). Twenty interventions performed during a 3-year study period (2007-2009) were randomly tested for consistency to analyse the kappa (κ) coefficient statistic of the recommendations as coded by nine senior and junior clinical pharmacists. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: There were 87·8% global consistency for NOM cause, 66·1% for intervention impact and 95·0% for NOM type. Agreement was substantial for 'intervention reasons', with a κ value of 0·74 (95%CI 0·61-0·87), fair for 'intervention impact', with a κ value of 0·24 (95%CI 0·15-0·32) and excellent for 'NOM type', with a κ value of 0·87 (95%CI 0·71-1·00), respectively. Our results are globally good, especially with regard to the analysis of intervention reasons and NOM type, which matches other authors' findings. Furthermore, our validation method is suitable for recording and considering the impact of pharmaceutical interventions. WHAT IS NEW AND CONCLUSION: We describe a systematic method for clinical pharmacists to record their activities and assess their value. This methodology should help in the development of clinical pharmacy in Spain and should be translatable to other settings.


Subject(s)
Databases, Factual/standards , Documentation/methods , Pharmacists/organization & administration , Pharmacy Service, Hospital/organization & administration , Humans , Observer Variation , Reproducibility of Results
5.
Farm. hosp ; 35(6): 305-314, nov.-dic. 2011. tab
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-107792

ABSTRACT

Objetivo Cuantificar la actividad de las Comisiones de Farmacia y Terapéutica (CFyT) con relación a la evaluación y selección de medicamentos, y describir la variabilidad en las decisiones de incorporación de los mismos. Método Estudio descriptivo transversal basado en un cuestionario dirigido a los 513 hospitales españoles con más de 75 camas. Se incluyeron preguntas referidas a las resoluciones de la CFyT, el posicionamiento terapéutico y los informes de evaluación. El reclutamiento se realizó entre noviembre de 2007 y enero de 2008. La variabilidad en las conclusiones de las CFyT se expresa en 5 categorías o grados de coincidencia. Resultados Participaron 175 hospitales, tasa de respuesta del 34% (54% de las camas). El número medio (DE) de medicamentos-indicación evaluados por hospital en 2006 fue 10,35 (7,45). La proporción de evaluaciones que concluyen en inclusión o rechazo del fármaco fue del 75,3 y 21,4%, respectivamente. En el 16,2% se concluyó en equivalencia terapéutica. Se establecieron condiciones de uso en un 64%, y se incluyeron en una guía clínica en un 33%. En cuanto a la variabilidad, en el 81,0% de las evaluaciones se coincide en la conclusión de incluir o de rechazar el medicamento, en el 19,0% se ha tomado la decisión opuesta a la mayoritaria. Conclusiones La actividad de evaluación y selección de medicamentos en los hospitales es considerable. La proporción de medicamentos aprobados es similar en los diferentes tipos de hospital. La variabilidad en la decisión de inclusión es amplia y similar a estudios realizados en otros países. Indican la conveniencia de estandarización de la metodología (AU)


Objective To quantify the Spanish Pharmacy and Therapeutics Commission (P&TC) activity with regard to assessing and selecting drugs and describing variability in decisions made to include them. Method Descriptive, cross-sectional study based on a questionnaire aimed at 513 hospitals with more than 75 beds. We included questions referring to the P&TC resolutions, the therapeutic positioning and assessment reports. Recruitment was carried out between November 2007 and January 2008. Variability among P&TC conclusions was presented in five categories or levels of coincidence. Results One hundred and seventy-five hospitals participated, with a response rate of 34% (54% of beds). The mean number of drug-indications assessed per hospital was 10.35 (7.45). The proportion of assessments that conclude with drug inclusion or rejection was 75.3% and 21.4%, respectively. 16.2% concluded with therapeutic equivalence. Conditions for use were established for 64% of them, and 33% were included in a clinical guide. With regard to variability, 81.0% of assessments coincided with the conclusion to include or reject the drug. A contradictory decision was made for 19.0%.ConclusionsDrug assessment and selection in hospitals are considerable. The proportion of drugs approved is similar in different types of hospitals. There is extensive variability as regards deciding upon inclusion and is similar to studies conducted in other countries. They indicate that a standardising methodology would be recommendable (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Drugs, Investigational/pharmacology , Investigational New Drug Application/statistics & numerical data , Drug Evaluation/trends , Pharmacy Service, Hospital/trends , /statistics & numerical data , Medication Therapy Management/trends
6.
Farm Hosp ; 35(6): 305-14, 2011.
Article in English, Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21497125

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To quantify the Spanish Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committees (P&TC) activity with regard to assessing and selecting drugs and describing variability in decisions made to include them. METHOD: Descriptive, cross-sectional study based on a questionnaire aimed to 513 hospitals with more than 75 beds. We included questions referring to the P&TC resolutions, the therapeutic positioning and assessment reports. Recruitment was carried out between November 2007 and January 2008. Variability among P&TC conclusions were presented in five categories or levels of coincidence. RESULTS: One hundred and seventy-five hospitals participated, with a response rate of 34% (54% of beds). The mean (SD) number of drug-indications assessed per hospital was 10.35 (7.45). The proportion of assessments that conclude with drug inclusion or rejection was 75.3 and 21.4%, respectively. 16.2% concluded with therapeutic equivalence. Conditions for use were established for 64% of them, and 33% were included in a clinical guide. With regard to variability, 81.0% of assessments coincided with the conclusion to include or reject the drug. A contradictory decision was made for 19.0%. CONCLUSIONS: Drug assessment and selection activity in hospitals involve an amount of work. The proportion of drugs approved is similar in different types of hospitals. There is extensive variability as regards deciding upon inclusion and is similar to studies conducted in other countries. They indicate that a standardising methodology would be recommendable.


Subject(s)
Pharmacy Service, Hospital , Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee , Cross-Sectional Studies , Hospitals , Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committee/standards , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Spain , Surveys and Questionnaires
7.
Rev Clin Esp ; 209(6): 270-8, 2009 Jun.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19635252

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The objective of this article is to describe the drug-related interventions made in the prescriptions with a computerized order entry system and to determine their frequency and clinical relevance in order to propose improvement actions. MATERIAL AND METHOD: Observational descriptive study. Drug-related interventions made in the inpatient's prescriptions of an Internal Medicine unit from January to May of 2007 were analyzed and recorded. The frequency of the intervention causes and of the drugs involved was determined.The clinical significance and impact of the recommendations were also determined. RESULTS: A total of 441 interventions were recorded, 0.73 per patient. The most frequent was the proposal of intravenous to oral conversion (45%), mainly with acetaminophen (63%) and protons pump inhibitors (24%). This was followed by replacement of drugs not included in the guide (15% of interventions), mainly involving cardiovascular and central nervous system drugs (23% each one). Educational actions proposed included a campaign to promote intravenous to oral conversion and a program involving therapeutic equivalent replacement. The most clinically significant interventions were due to dosage errors, therapeutic duplicities, off label medications and adverse events. A proposal was made to include a new module in the medical order entry system that alerts on the established maximum doses for each drug, and new protocols for the treatment of certain conditions. Sixty percent of the interventions achieved an improvement in efficiency. DISCUSSION: We conclude that drug therapy intervention analysis can identify items that can be improved, set educational actions for physicians and new protocols for certain conditions. Innovative actions can be introduced into the medical order entry system in order to improve drug safety.


Subject(s)
Medical Order Entry Systems/statistics & numerical data , Hospital Units , Humans , Internal Medicine
8.
Rev Clin Esp ; 208(7): 326-32, 2008.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18625178

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: To know how the health care workers perceive the risks derived from the care practice. To estimate the most frequent adverse effects (AE) and establish differences and similarities between the perception of risks and the AE produced. MATERIAL AND METHOD: A self-administered questionnaire was applied to all the workers of an Internal Medicine Department of a General University Hospital on perception of risks and safety of the patient. After, and by using the screening guide of the IDEA project, edition 1, the clinical histories of the patients selected were analyzed by medical residents of preventive Medicine and Internal Medicine. RESULTS: Questionnaire. Fifty questionnaires we sent with a 42% response rate. Risks prioritized by obtaining a lower mean score: there is not action plan against catastrophes (2.79/10) and lack of spaces to report (3/10); those having greater percentage of open questions: long maintenance of urinary probes (47.61%) and inadequate prescription of antibiotics (33.33%). Study of AE. Incidence of patients with AE: 25% (95% CI 11.06-38.9). Incidence of AE: 26.6% (95% CI 12.6-40.6). 41.6% of AE was related to medication, 25% to nosocomial infection, 16.66% to technical problems in procedures and 16.66% were related to nursing cares. CONCLUSIONS: The perception of the health care workers on health care practice derived risks is different from the adverse events that really appear. The professionals are concerned about the information to patients than about scientific and technical quality. The most frequent adverse events produced are those related with medication. The only common point is concern for nosocomial infection.


Subject(s)
Internal Medicine , Personnel, Hospital , Risk Management , Surveys and Questionnaires , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Risk Factors , Young Adult
9.
Rev. clín. esp. (Ed. impr.) ; 208(7): 326-332, jul. 2008. tab
Article in Es | IBECS | ID: ibc-67040

ABSTRACT

Fundamento y objetivos. Conocer la percepción que los profesionales sanitarios tienen sobre los riesgos derivados de la práctica asistencial, estimar los efectos adversos (EA) más frecuentes, y establecer las diferencias y similitudes entre la percepción de riesgos y los EA producidos. Material y método. Se realizó una encuesta autoadministrada sobre percepción de riesgos y seguridad del paciente a todo el personal de un servicio de medicina interna de un hospital general universitario. Posteriormente, y a través de la guía de cribado del proyecto IDEA 1ª edición, se analizaron las historias clínicas de los pacientes seleccionados por médicos residentes de medicina preventiva y de medicina interna. Resultados. Encuesta. Se enviaron 50 cuestionarios y se obtuvo una tasa de respuesta del 42%. Los riesgos priorizados por obtener una puntuación media más baja fueron la no existencia de plan de actuación frente a catástrofes (2,79 sobre 10) y la falta de espacios para informar (3 sobre 10.); y por mayor porcentaje en las preguntas abiertas, el mantenimiento prolongado de sondajes urinarios, con un 47.61% y la prescripción inadecuada de antibióticos (33,33%). Estudio sobre efectos adversos. Incidencia acumulada (IA) de pacientes con EA: 25% (intervalo de confianza [IC] 95% 11,06-38,9); IA de EA: 26,6% (IC 95% 12,6-40,6). El 41,6% de los EA estuvieron relacionados con la medicación, un 25% con la infección nosocomial, y con problemas técnicos de procedimientos y con fallos en los cuidados del paciente un 16,66% cada uno. Conclusiones. La percepción de los profesionales sanitarios sobre los riesgos derivados de la práctica asistencial es diferente a los sucesos adversos que realmente se terminan materializando. Los profesionales están más preocupados por la información a los pacientes y por la calidad científico-técnica. Los sucesos adversos más frecuentes que se producen son los relacionados con la medicación. El único punto común es la preocupación por la infección nosocomial (AU)


Background and objective. To know how the health care workers perceive the risks derived from the care practice. To estimate the most frequent adverse effects (AE) and establish differences and similarities between the perception of risks and the AE produced. Material and method. A self-administered questionnaire was applied to all the workers of an Internal Medicine Department of a General University Hospital on perception of risks and safety of the patient. After, and by using the screening guide of the IDEA project, edition 1, the clinical histories of the patients selected were analyzed by medical residents of preventive Medicine and Internal Medicine. Results. Questionnaire. Fifty questionnaires we sent with a 42% response rate. Risks prioritized by obtaining a lower mean score: there is not action plan against catastrophes (2.79/10) and lack of spaces to report (3/10); those having greater percentage of open questions: long maintenance of urinary probes (47.61%) and inadequate prescription of antibiotics (33.33%). Study of AE. Incidence of patients with AE: 25% (95% CI 11.06-38.9). Incidence of AE: 26.6% (95% CI 12.6-40.6). 41.6% of AE was related to medication, 25% to nosocomial infection, 16.66% to technical problems in procedures and 16.66% were related to nursing cares. Conclusions. The perception of the health care workers on health care practice derived risks is different from the adverse events that really appear. The professionals are concerned about the information to patients than about scientific and technical quality. The most frequent adverse events produced are those related with medication. The only common point is concern for nosocomial infection (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Safety Management/trends , Risk Assessment/trends , Professional Practice/organization & administration , 24419 , Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems/trends
10.
An Med Interna ; 24(12): 602-6, 2007 Dec.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18279001

ABSTRACT

Ensuring patient safety is essential for better heath care. Safety have gripped public attention ever since the release of the report "To Err is Human". To find strategies of promotion of patient safety has stimulated models that improve knowledge of adverse events. Adverse drug events are the most common cause of injury to hospitalized patients and are often preventable. Many tactics are available to make system changes to reduce errors and adverse events; they fall into five categories: Reduce complexity, optimise information processing, automate wisely, use constraints, and mitigate the unwanted side effects of change. These tactics can be deployed to support any of the three strategic components of error prevention, detection, and mitigation. Although progress has been slow, the pace of change is likely to accelerate, particularly in implementation of electronic health records and diffusion of safe practices.


Subject(s)
Patients , Safety , Humans , Risk Assessment , Risk Factors , Spain
11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16875102

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: This paper seeks to analyse clinical pathways (CP) as a useful tool for the improvement of all aspects of quality in medical assistance - in this case, hip arthroplasty. DESIGN/METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: The study was carried out on patients who had undergone scheduled hip arthroplasty included in CP during the years 1999 to 2004. Data on demographics, lengths of stay, complications, process and result variables were gathered, coverage was calculated and the evolution of the indicators was compared. FINDINGS: A total of 487 patients were enrolled, with five leaving the pathway and with unequal coverage, leading to a maximum peak of 77 per cent in 1999. A statistically significant decrease exists in the consumption of overall stays and in the pre-surgical stay, which dropped from a mean of 19.41 days in the pre-pathway situation to 10.12 days in 2004 and 4.5 days pre-surgery to 1.08 days. As a process indicator, the performance should be highlighted of post-operation check-up radiographies, which have been gaining high levels of compliance (p < 0.05) since 2001. The rate of complications has remained stable over the years. ORIGINALITY/VALUE: Implementing the CP has meant a sustained saving of resources over the years and an improvement in the organization of work.


Subject(s)
Arthroplasty, Replacement, Hip , Critical Pathways/standards , Follow-Up Studies , Humans , Prospective Studies , Quality of Health Care , Spain
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