Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 18 de 18
Filter
1.
Explor Res Clin Soc Pharm ; 14: 100440, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38623489

ABSTRACT

Introduction: The intricate nature of certain diseases necessitates complex medication regimens, utilization including high-cost medications, and continual vigilance to avoid potential complications. To address these exigencies, numerous healthcare institutions have instituted multidisciplinary management teams, exemplified in pharmaceutical care through Comprehensive Medication Management (CMM) programs. These programs oversee diverse facets such as patient education, medication adherence promotion, clinical monitoring, dose adjustments, and scrutiny of prescribed drug therapies. Given the emphasized significance, it is relevant to possess evidence to continue endorsing these initiatives from management positions within health centers, and it is for this reason that this study aims to evaluate the clinical and economic benefits provided by a CMM program within a private hospital in Latin America, by analyzing the effects of clinical interventions. Methods: A retrospective examination was conducted involving documented pharmaceutical interventions in an outpatient setting from January 2019 to September 2022. To assess the interventions' repercussions, a retrospective analysis was undertaken. The collated data included patients' basic characteristics, a comprehensive pharmacist-generated description of interventions, potential associated complications, and avoided medical services. Multiple clinical projections, which were endorsed by internal medicine physicians, were developed to explore potential scenarios in the absence of pharmaceutical care. These projections were associated with conceivable complications, aligned with the most plausible circumstances. Subsequently, utilizing the average cost of healthcare within a private hospital in Latin America, the cumulative savings were quantified. These savings were then attributed to the intrinsic advantages offered by pharmaceutical care. Results: The study discloses demographic trends among patients within distinct age groups in the CMM program. Rheumatology predominated as the main referral source, and interventions centering on monitoring emerged as the pivotal drug-related concern. This encompassed a collaborative approach, involving interdisciplinary efforts toward patient education and critical parameter monitoring. Of the total 347 pharmaceutical interventions, 66.3% (N = 230) specialty office visits, 14.1% (N = 49) general practitioner consultations, 12.4% (N = 43) hospitalizations, and 7.2% (N = 25) ER visits were avoided. The economic analysis underscores cost savings ensuing from pharmaceutical interventions, amounting to a cumulative 603,792.82 USD. Extrapolating these findings to a patient cohort of 400 enrolled in the pharmaceutical care program approximates per-patient savings of 361.47 USD. Conclusion: This study reveals the significant clinical and economic benefits of CMM programs, led by multidisciplinary pharmaceutical professionals. The findings provide compelling evidence for hospital management to consider promoting such programs, drawing from the patient-centered care model in the United States applicable to Latin America.

2.
Medicina (B Aires) ; 83(5): 719-726, 2023.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37870329

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: During the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, Argentina population suffered from significant changes in population mobility due to non-pharmaceutical interventions. The aim of this study was to describe the impact of the mobility restrictions to the rates of positivity and diversity among different respiratory viruses. METHODS: Retrospective analytical study performed at Instituto Médico Platense in La Plata that included 458 patients with nasopharyngeal swab to search for respiratory pathogens by multiplex PCR. Changes in mobility were studied using "Community Mobility Reports", data set developed by Google and publicly available. RESULTS: Community mobility had significant correlation with the percentages of viral test positivity (p = < 0.01; R2=0.89) and viral diversity (p = 0.04; R2 = 0.78). DISCUSSION: Non-pharmaceutical interventions established to contain SARS-CoV-2 spread had a significant impact in the circulation patterns of other respiratory viruses.


Introducción: Durante la pandemia de SARS-CoV-2 en Argentina se implementaron intervenciones no farmacológicas que produjeron cambios en la movilidad de la población. El objetivo de este estudio fue relacionar los porcentajes de positividad y la diversidad viral con la movilidad poblacional durante parte del período de restricciones. Métodos: Estudio retrospectivo analítico realizado en el Instituto Médico Platense durante los años 2020 a 2022 que incluyó 458 pacientes a los que se les tomó un hisopado nasofaríngeo para la búsqueda de patógenos respiratorios por PCR multiplex. Se analizaron los cambios en la movilidad de la población utilizando los "Informes de Movilidad Local", herramienta desarrollada por Google, cuyos datos son de público acceso. Resultados: La movilidad poblacional se correlacionó significativamente con el porcentaje de positividad de las muestras (p = <0.01; R2 = 0.89) y la diversidad viral (p = 0.04; R2 = 0.78). Discusión: Las intervenciones no farmacológicas destinadas a limitar la propagación del SARS-CoV-2 tuvieron efecto en la circulación de otros virus respiratorios, hallándose mayor porcentaje de positividad y diversidad a medida que las mismas disminuyeron su grado de restricción.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Humans , SARS-CoV-2 , Pandemics , Retrospective Studies , Argentina/epidemiology
3.
Prev Med Rep ; 36: 102459, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37840596

ABSTRACT

Recent advances in technology can be leveraged to enhance public health research and practice. This study aimed to assess the effects of mobility and policy changes on COVID-19 case growth and the effects of policy changes on mobility using data from Google Mobility Reports, information on public health policy, and COVID-19 testing results. Multiple bivariate regression analyses were conducted to address the study objectives. Policies designed to limit mobility led to decreases in mobility in public areas. These policies also decreased COVID-19 case growth. Conversely, policies that did not restrict mobility led to increases in mobility in public areas and led to increases in COVID-19 case growth. Mobility increases in public areas corresponded to increases in COVID-19 case growth, while concentration of mobility in residential areas corresponded to decreases in COVID-19 case growth. Overall, restrictive policies were effective in decreasing COVID-19 incidence in the Dominican Republic, while permissive policies led to increases in COVID-19 incidence.

4.
Emerg Microbes Infect ; 12(2): 2259001, 2023 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37698611

ABSTRACT

Ecuador had substantial COVID-19-mortality during 2020 despite early implementation of non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs). Resource-limited settings like Ecuador have high proportions of informal labour which entail high human mobility, questioning efficacy of NPIs. We performed a retrospective observational study in Ecuador's national reference laboratory for viral respiratory infections during March 2020-February 2021 using stored respiratory specimens from 1950 patients, corresponding to 2.3% of all samples analysed within the Ecuadorian national surveillance system per week. During 2020, detection of SARS-CoV-2 (Pearson correlation; r = -0.74; p = 0.01) and other respiratory viruses (Pearson correlation; r = -0.68; p = 0.02) by real-time RT-PCR correlated negatively with NPIs stringency. Among respiratory viruses, adenoviruses (Fisher's exact-test; p = 0.026), parainfluenzaviruses (p = 0.04), enteroviruses (p < 0.0001) and metapneumoviruses (p < 0.0001) occurred significantly more frequently during months of absent or non-stringent NPIs (characterized by <55% stringency according to the Oxford stringency index data for Ecuador). Phylogenomic analyses of 632 newly characterized SARS-CoV-2 genomes revealed 100 near-parallel SARS-CoV-2 introductions during early 2020 in the absence of NPIs. NPI stringency correlated negatively with the number of circulating SARS-CoV-2 lineages during 2020 (r = -0.69; p = 0.02). Phylogeographic reconstructions showed differential SARS-CoV-2 dispersion patterns during 2020, with more short-distance transitions potentially associated with recreational activity during non-stringent NPIs. There were also fewer geographic transitions during strict NPIs (n = 450) than during non-stringent or absent NPIs (n = 580). Virological evidence supports that NPIs had an effect on virus spread and distribution in Ecuador, providing a template for future epidemics in resource-limited settings and contributing to a balanced assessment of societal costs entailed by strict NPIs.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Humans , Adenoviridae/genetics , COVID-19/epidemiology , COVID-19/prevention & control , Ecuador/epidemiology , Resource-Limited Settings , SARS-CoV-2/genetics , Retrospective Studies
5.
EPJ Data Sci ; 12(1): 18, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37305560

ABSTRACT

Adherence to the non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) put in place to mitigate the spreading of infectious diseases is a multifaceted problem. Several factors, including socio-demographic and socio-economic attributes, can influence the perceived susceptibility and risk which are known to affect behavior. Furthermore, the adoption of NPIs is dependent upon the barriers, real or perceived, associated with their implementation. Here, we study the determinants of NPIs adherence during the first wave of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Colombia, Ecuador, and El Salvador. Analyses are performed at the level of municipalities and include socio-economic, socio-demographic, and epidemiological indicators. Furthermore, by leveraging a unique dataset comprising tens of millions of internet Speedtest® measurements from Ookla®, we investigate the quality of the digital infrastructure as a possible barrier to adoption. We use mobility changes provided by Meta as a proxy of adherence to NPIs and find a significant correlation between mobility drops and digital infrastructure quality. The relationship remains significant after controlling for several factors. This finding suggests that municipalities with better internet connectivity were able to afford higher mobility reductions. We also find that mobility reductions were more pronounced in larger, denser, and wealthier municipalities. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1140/epjds/s13688-023-00395-5.

6.
Clin. biomed. res ; 43(1): 30-38, 2023.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-1435608

ABSTRACT

Introdução:O presente estudo considerou conciliações medicamentosas realizadas na admissão hospitalar de pacientes transplantados renais e intervenções farmacêuticas decorrentes desse processo.Métodos:Trata-se de um estudo transversal realizado no período de julho de 2018 a julho de 2019 no Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre. Foram coletadas as características dos pacientes, as conciliações medicamentosas realizadas pelo farmacêutico clínico, as discrepâncias identificadas pelo mesmo (intencionais e não intencionais) e o resultado das intervenções. Os medicamentos foram classificados de acordo com a Anatomic Therapeutic Chemical (ATC).Resultados:Dos 719 pacientes acompanhados pelo farmacêutico clínico, 175 tiveram a conciliação medicamentosa de admissão realizada, desses, 56 apresentaram discrepâncias não intencionais. Encontramos a média de 2,2 medicamentos omissos por prescrição com desvio padrão de 1,3 medicamentos. No total, foram realizadas 122 intervenções farmacêuticas, sendo que em 61,5% houve adesão por parte da equipe médica. A classe terapêutica com maior ocorrência (43,4%) de discrepâncias não intencionais foi a que atuava sobre o aparelho cardiovascular. As variáveis observadas foram sexo, número de medicamentos nas intervenções (ambas com associação significativa com a adesão médica), idade, tempo de internação, número de medicamentos na internação e número de medicamentos de uso prévio (estas últimas sem associação significativa com a adesão médica). Conclusões:A conciliação medicamentosa previne possíveis erros de medicação, uma vez que a identificação das discrepâncias não intencionais na prescrição médica gera sinalizações que são levadas pelo farmacêutico clínico à equipe assistente, a fim garantir o uso seguro e correto dos medicamentos durante a internação hospitalar.


Introduction:This study considered medication reconciliations performed on hospital admission of kidney transplant patients and pharmaceutical interventions resulting from this process.Methods:This is a cross-sectional study carried out from July 2018 to July 2019 at Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre. The characteristics of the patients, the medication reconciliations performed by the clinical pharmacist, the discrepancies identified by the same (intentional and unintentional) and the result of the interventions were collected. The drugs were classified according to the Anatomic Therapeutic Chemical (ATC). Results:Of the 719 patients monitored by the clinical pharmacist, 175 had medication reconciliation on admission performed, of which 56 had unintentional discrepancies. We found an average of 2.2 missing medications per prescription with a standard deviation of 1.3 medications. In total, 122 pharmaceutical interventions were performed, and in 61.5% there was adherence by the medical team. The therapeutic class with the highest occurrence (43.4%) of unintentional discrepancies was that which acted on the cardiovascular system. The variables observed were gender, number of medications in interventions (both with a significant association with medical adherence), age, length of stay, number of medications in hospitalization and number of medications previously used (the latter without a significant association with medical adherence).Conclusions:Medication reconciliation prevents possible medication errors, since the identification of unintentional discrepancies in the medical prescription generates signals that are taken by the clinical pharmacist to the assistant team, in order to guarantee the safe and correct use of medications during hospitalization.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Adult , Middle Aged , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Young Adult , Pharmaceutical Services/statistics & numerical data , Drug Therapy/statistics & numerical data , Medication Reconciliation/statistics & numerical data , Clinical Pharmacy Information Systems/supply & distribution , Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions
7.
Glob Epidemiol ; 4: 100094, 2022 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36404949

ABSTRACT

We simulate the impact of school reopening during the COVID-19 pandemic in three major urban centers in Brazil to identify the epidemiological indicators and the best timing for the return of in-school activities and the effect of contact tracing as a mitigation measure. Our goal is to offer guidelines for evidence-based policymaking. We implement an extended SEIR model stratified by age and considering contact networks in different settings - school, home, work, and community, in which the infection transmission rate is affected by various intervention measures. After fitting epidemiological and demographic data, we simulate scenarios with increasing school transmission due to school reopening, and also estimate the number of hospitalization and deaths averted by the implementation of contact tracing. Reopening schools results in a non-linear increase in reported COVID-19 cases and deaths, which is highly dependent on infection and disease incidence at the time of reopening. When contact tracing and quarantining are restricted to school and home settings, a large number of daily tests is required to produce significant effects in reducing the total number of hospitalizations and deaths. Policymakers should carefully consider the epidemiological context and timing regarding the implementation of school closure and return of in-person school activities. While contact tracing strategies prevent new infections within school environments, they alone are not sufficient to avoid significant impacts on community transmission.

8.
Transp Policy (Oxf) ; 126: 136-150, 2022 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35855479

ABSTRACT

Governments around the globe have taken different measures to tackle the COVID-19 pandemic, including the lockdown of people to decrease infections. The effect of such a strategy on transport demand is important not only for the current pandemic but also to understand changes in transport use and for future emergencies. We analyse a 2019-2020 database of smartcard data of trips from the city of Santiago, Chile, which followed a dynamic lockdown strategy in which its municipalities were temporarily restricted. We use this variation over time across municipalities to study the effect of lockdowns on public transportation using trips on buses and metro, accounting for the variation of municipalities that were under lockdown in a given day. We found a decrease of 72.3% at the beginning of the pandemic when schools suspended in-person classes, while the dynamic lockdowns reduced public transport demand by 12.1%. We also found that the effect of lockdowns decreased after the fifth week of their application, suggesting a short-term effectiveness of such policy to reduce mobility. Regarding sociodemographic effects, we found that lockdowns have a stronger impact on reducing public transport demand in municipalities with a larger proportion of the elderly population (2% additional reduction per 1% increase in the share of the elderly population) and high-income households (16% additional reduction for 1000 USD increase in GDP per capita).

9.
Epidemics ; 39: 100577, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35636309

ABSTRACT

Successful partnerships between researchers, experts, and public health authorities have been critical to navigate the challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic worldwide. In this collaboration, mathematical models have played a decisive role in informing public policy, with findings effectively translated into public health measures that have shaped the pandemic in Costa Rica. As a result of interdisciplinary and cross-institutional collaboration, we constructed a multilayer network model that incorporates a diverse contact structure for each individual. In July 2020, we used this model to test the effect of lifting restrictions on population mobility after a so-called "epidemiological fence" imposed to contain the country's first big wave of cases. Later, in August 2020, we used it to predict the effects of an open and close strategy (the Hammer and Dance). Scenarios constructed in July 2020 showed that lifting restrictions on population mobility after less than three weeks of epidemiological fence would produce a sharp increase in cases. Results from scenarios in August 2020 indicated that the Hammer and Dance strategy would only work with 50% of the population adhering to mobility restrictions. The development, evolution, and applications of a multilayer network model of Covid-19 in Costa Rica has guided decision-makers to anticipate implementing sanitary measures and contributed to gain valuable time to increase hospital capacity.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , COVID-19/epidemiology , Costa Rica/epidemiology , Health Policy , Humans , Pandemics , Public Policy
10.
MDM Policy Pract ; 6(2): 23814683211049249, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34660906

ABSTRACT

Background. Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA) has the largest number of COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019) cases in Mexico and is at risk of exceeding its hospital capacity in early 2021. Methods. We used the Stanford-CIDE Coronavirus Simulation Model (SC-COSMO), a dynamic transmission model of COVID-19, to evaluate the effect of policies considering increased contacts during the end-of-year holidays, intensification of physical distancing, and school reopening on projected confirmed cases and deaths, hospital demand, and hospital capacity exceedance. Model parameters were derived from primary data, literature, and calibrated. Results. Following high levels of holiday contacts even with no in-person schooling, MCMA will have 0.9 million (95% prediction interval 0.3-1.6) additional COVID-19 cases between December 7, 2020, and March 7, 2021, and hospitalizations will peak at 26,000 (8,300-54,500) on January 25, 2021, with a 97% chance of exceeding COVID-19-specific capacity (9,667 beds). If MCMA were to control holiday contacts, the city could reopen in-person schools, provided they increase physical distancing with 0.5 million (0.2-0.9) additional cases and hospitalizations peaking at 12,000 (3,700-27,000) on January 19, 2021 (60% chance of exceedance). Conclusion. MCMA must increase COVID-19 hospital capacity under all scenarios considered. MCMA's ability to reopen schools in early 2021 depends on sustaining physical distancing and on controlling contacts during the end-of-year holiday.

11.
Epidemics ; 35: 100465, 2021 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33984687

ABSTRACT

COVID-19 is now identified in almost all countries in the world, with poorer regions being particularly more disadvantaged to efficiently mitigate the impacts of the pandemic. In the absence of efficient therapeutics or large-scale vaccination, control strategies are currently based on non-pharmaceutical interventions, comprising changes in population behavior and governmental interventions, among which the prohibition of mass gatherings, closure of non-essential establishments, quarantine and movement restrictions. In this work we analyzed the effects of 707 governmental interventions published up to May 22, 2020, and population adherence thereof, on the dynamics of COVID-19 cases across all 27 Brazilian states, with emphasis on state capitals and remaining inland cities. A generalized SEIR (Susceptible, Exposed, Infected and Removed) model with a time-varying transmission rate (TR), that considers transmission by asymptomatic individuals, is presented. We analyze the effect of both the extent of enforced measures across Brazilian states and population movement on the changes in the TR and effective reproduction number. The social mobility reduction index, a measure of population movement, together with the stringency index, adapted to incorporate the degree of restrictions imposed by governmental regulations, were used in conjunction to quantify and compare the effects of varying degrees of policy strictness across Brazilian states. Our results show that population adherence to social distance recommendations plays an important role for the effectiveness of interventions and represents a major challenge to the control of COVID-19 in low- and middle-income countries.


Subject(s)
COVID-19/prevention & control , COVID-19/transmission , Communicable Disease Control/legislation & jurisprudence , SARS-CoV-2 , Basic Reproduction Number , Brazil/epidemiology , COVID-19/epidemiology , Humans , Models, Theoretical , Public Policy
12.
Glob Public Health ; 16(8-9): 1209-1222, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33876715

ABSTRACT

It is easy but mistaken to think that public health emergency measures and social policy can be separated. This paper compares the experiences of Brazil, Germany, India and the United States during their 2020 responses to the COVID-19 pandemic to show that social policies such as unemployment insurance, flat payments and short-time work are crucial to the effectiveness of non-pharmaceutical interventions as well as to their political sustainability. Broadly, public health measures that constrain economic activity will only be effective and sustainable if paired with social policy measures that enable people to comply without sacrificing their livelihoods and economic wellbeing. Tough public health policies and generous social policies taken together proved a success in Germany. Generous social policies uncoupled from strong public health interventions, in Brazil and the US during the summer of 2020, enabled lockdown compliance but failed to halt the pandemic, while tough public health measures without social policy support rapidly collapsed in India. In the COVID-19 and future pandemics, public health theory and practice should recognise the importance of social policy to the immediate effectiveness of public health policy as well as to the long-term social and economic impact of pandemics.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Pandemics , Public Policy , Brazil/epidemiology , COVID-19/epidemiology , COVID-19/prevention & control , Germany/epidemiology , Humans , India/epidemiology , Pandemics/prevention & control , United States/epidemiology
13.
Rev. adm. pública (Online) ; 55(1): 27-49, Jan.-Feb. 2021. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1155657

ABSTRACT

Abstract In Brazil, sub-national governments have played a particularly important role as the key actors implementing non-pharmaceutical interventions to halt the spread of COVID-19. Building on the methodology proposed by the Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker (OxCGRT), we coded the stringency levels of state-level school, commerce, services, industry, public gathering, and private event closure policies and describe these actions' duration at the state-level in Brazil from early February to mid-May 2020. Our results suggest significant heterogeneity across Brazil and across weeks in social distancing policy stringency during this period. We then apply dynamic times-series cross-sectional methods to evaluate the effect of anti-contagion policies on the population's mobility using cell phone location data. We find that anti-contagion policies had a significant effect on producing higher adherence to remaining at home even though social distancing policies were relatively moderate as compared to other countries. Our results also suggest that social distancing policies have a greater impact when a more complete and coherent set of policies were introduced and sustained by state governments.


Resumo No caso brasileiro, os governos subnacionais exerceram um papel particularmente importante na implementação de medidas não farmacológicas para contenção do alastramento do COVID-19. Baseando-se na metodologia do Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker (OxCGRT), codificamos a rigidez das políticas de fechamento de escolas, comércio e serviços, aglomerações públicas e eventos privados implementadas em nível estadual e descrevemos sua duração nos estados brasileiros entre meados de fevereiro e a metade de maio de 2020. Nossos resultados sugerem alta heterogeneidade ao longo do tempo e entre os estados na rigidez das políticas de distanciamento social durante o período analisado. Aplicamos em seguida métodos dinâmicos de séries temporais em painel com o objetivo de avaliar o efeito da rigidez das políticas sobre a mobilidade da população. Para isso, utilizamos dados de localização provenientes de celulares para mensurar mobilidade. Apesar da adesão relativamente moderada às medidas de distanciamento social pelos estados brasileiros, em comparação a estados em outros países durante o mesmo período, nossos achados sugerem que as políticas de distanciamento social tiveram efeito significativo na produção de níveis mais altos de adesão à permanência em casa pela população. Nossos resultados também sugerem que as políticas de distanciamento social têm maior impacto quando um conjunto mais completo e coerente de políticas é introduzido e sustentado pelos governos estaduais.


Resumen Los gobiernos implementaron una serie de políticas para combatir la pandemia de COVID-19. En el caso brasileño, los gobiernos subnacionales jugaron un papel particularmente importante como actores clave en la implementación de medidas no farmacológicas para contener la propagación del virus. A partir de la metodología del Rastreador de Respuestas Gubernamentales frente a la COVID-19 desarrollado por la Universidad de Oxford (OxCGRT), codificamos las distintas restricciones como el cierre de escuelas, comercios, servicios, industrias y la prohibición de aglomeraciones públicas y eventos privados, implementados en los estados brasileños y describimos su duración entre mediados de febrero y la primera quincena de mayo de 2020. Nuestros resultados sugieren una alta heterogeneidad respecto de la rigidez de las políticas de distanciamiento social, a través de los estados y a lo largo de las semanas de este período. Luego aplicamos la técnica de análisis de series temporales dinámicas del tipo panel para evaluar el efecto de las políticas para evitar contagios sobre la movilidad de la población, empleando datos de la ubicación de teléfonos celulares. Encontramos que a pesar de que las medidas de distanciamiento social implementadas por los estados brasileños fueron relativamente moderadas, en comparación con los estados de otros países durante el mismo período, nuestros hallazgos sugieren que las políticas para combatir los contagios tuvieron un efecto significativo en el logro de mayores niveles de adhesión a la permanencia en el hogar. Asimismo, nuestros resultados indican que las políticas de distanciamiento social tuvieron un mayor impacto cuando los gobiernos estatales introdujeron y mantuvieron un conjunto más amplio de medidas coherentes e integrales.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Public Policy , Social Isolation , Federalism , Pandemics , COVID-19
14.
Clin. biomed. res ; 41(4): 299-305, 2021. graf
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-1349517

ABSTRACT

Introdução: O farmacêutico clínico já está bem estabelecido em algumas instituições e muitos serviços de saúde contam com este profissional em suas equipes, entretanto, poucos conseguem sistematizar o seu trabalho e mapear os dados das atividades desenvolvidas, demonstrando a relevância do profissional na equipe de saúde. O objetivo deste trabalho foi avaliar o acompanhamento clínico-farmacêutico em uma unidade de internação adulto-cirúrgica em um hospital universitário de Porto Alegre. Métodos: Estudo descritivo retrospectivo que quantificou as principais atividades do farmacêutico clínico em uma unidade de internação adulto-cirúrgica no período de janeiro a maio de 2019. Este projeto foi aprovado no Comitê de Ética em Pesquisa da referida instituição. Resultados: 859 pacientes foram admitidos na unidade cirúrgica avaliada, dos quais 490 foram revisados pelo farmacêutico na admissão hospitalar, correspondendo à taxa média de 57,27%. A taxa média de conciliação medicamentosa realizada foi de 14,83%, totalizando 73 pacientes conciliados por entrevista. 361 intervenções farmacêuticas foram realizadas no período estudado, sendo 54 relacionadas a conciliação medicamentosa, com o número total de adesões de 232. As principais especialidades cirúrgicas que internam pacientes na unidade em questão foram a Ortopedia, Cirurgia do Aparelho Digestivo, Urologia e Cirurgia Vascular. Conclusões: Foi possível avaliar o acompanhamento clínico farmacêutico em uma unidade de internação adulto-cirúrgica em um hospital universitário de Porto Alegre, através da quantificação das taxas de pacientes revisados e de conciliação medicamentosa, do número de intervenções farmacêuticas e suas adesões, além de caracterizar as principais especialidades médicas cirúrgicas envolvidas. (AU)


Introduction: Clinical pharmacists are already well established in some institutions, and many health services have these professionals in their teams. However, few are able to systematize their work and map data from the developed activities, demonstrating the relevance of these professionals in the health team. This study aimed to evaluate the clinical pharmacist follow-up in an adult surgical inpatient unit in a university hospital in Porto Alegre. Methods: This is a retrospective, descriptive study that quantified the main activities of the clinical pharmacist in an adult surgical inpatient unit from January to May 2019. This project was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the institution. Results: Of 859 patients admitted to the s rgical unit, 490 were reviewed by the pharmacist on hospital admission, corresponding to an average rate of 57.27%. The average medication reconciliation rate was 14.83%, totaling 73 patients reconciled per interview. Of 361 pharmaceutical interventions performed during the study period, 54 were related to medication reconciliation, and the total number of adhesions was 232. The main surgical specialties associated with admission to the study unit were Orthopedics, Digestive System Surgery, Urology, and Vascular Surgery. Conclusions: It was possible to evaluate the clinical pharmacist follow-up in an adult surgical inpatient unit in a university hospital in Porto Alegre by quantifying the rates of reviewed patients and medication reconciliations as well as the number of pharmaceutical interventions and their adherences, in addition to characterizing the main medical-surgical specialties involved. (AU)


Subject(s)
Pharmaceutical Services/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, University , Pharmacists , Pharmaceutical Preparations , Medication Reconciliation/statistics & numerical data , Patient Care
15.
Front Pharmacol ; 10: 302, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31001117

ABSTRACT

Background: Patients over 65 years of age taking multiple medications face several risks, and pharmaceutical interventions can be useful to improve quality of care and reduce those risks. However, there is still no consensus on the effectiveness of these interventions aimed at promoting changes in clinical, epidemiological, economic, and humanistic outcomes for various service delivery, organizational, financial, and implementation-based interventions. The objective of this overview of systematic reviews was to summarize evidence on the effectiveness of community-level pharmaceutical interventions to reduce the risks associated with polypharmacy in the population over 65 years of age. Method: This overview used a previously described protocol to search for systematic review articles, with and without meta-analysis, and economic evaluations, without any language or time restrictions, including articles published up to May 2018. The following databases were searched: the Cochrane Library, Epistemonikos, Health Evidence, Health Systems Evidence, Virtual Health Library, and Google Scholar. The basic search terms used were "elderly," "polypharmacy," and "pharmaceutical interventions." The findings for outcomes of interest were categorized using a taxonomy for health policies and systems. Equity-related questions were also investigated. The studies were evaluated for methodological quality and produced a narrative synthesis. Results: A total of 642 records were retrieved: 50 from Health Evidence, 197 from Epistemonikos, 194 from Cochrane, 116 from Health Systems Evidence, and 85 from the Virtual Health Library. Of these, 16 articles were selected: 1 overview of systematic reviews, 12 systematic reviews, and 3 economic evaluations. There is evidence of improvement in clinical, epidemiological, humanistic, and economic outcomes for various types of community-level pharmaceutical interventions, but differences in observed outcomes may be due to study designs, primary study sample sizes, risk of bias, difficulty in aggregating data, heterogeneity of indicators and quality of evidence included in the systematic reviews that were assessed. It is necessary to optimize the methodological designs of future primary and secondary studies. Conclusion: Community-level pharmaceutical interventions can improve various clinical, epidemiological, humanistic and economic outcomes and potentially reduce risks associated with polypharmacy in the elderly population.

16.
Braz. J. Pharm. Sci. (Online) ; 53(2): e16089, 2017. tab, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-839488

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a group of different risk factors that raises the chances of develop several health problems such, as cardiovascular disease and diabetes. There are few cases in literature of studies that specifically address the use of pharmaceutical care in MetS. The aim of study was to evaluate the effectiveness of home pharmaceutical interventions in patients with this syndrome. The randomized clinical trial was conducted in subjects with diagnosis of MetS treated in a basic unit of health from Cuité, Paraíba. The patients were randomized in a 1:1 ratio to two groups: intervention (IG) and control (CG). The IG received monthly individual pharmaceutical interventions, while the CG did not. The effectiveness of the intervention protocol was measured after six months, comparing the hemodynamic values, anthropometric, biochemistry, cardiovascular risk, medication adherence, drug related problems (DRP) and quality of life. The sample consisted of 63 individuals (33 IG and 30 CG) and older than 60 years. The majority of pharmaceutical interventions were educational and/or behavioral. In the intervention group, significant differences were observed in the parameters systolic and diastolic blood pressure, triglycerides, medication adherence and DRP. The pharmaceutical interventions at home were effective in improving medication adherence, decreasing DRPs and helping to control components of the metabolic syndrome.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Infant , Adult , Middle Aged , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Randomized Controlled Trial , Metabolic Syndrome/prevention & control , /statistics & numerical data , Evaluation of the Efficacy-Effectiveness of Interventions , Patients/classification , Drug Storage
17.
Braz. j. pharm. sci ; 49(4): 659-668, Oct.-Dec. 2013. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-704097

ABSTRACT

A descriptive and prospective study was conducted on the pharmaceutical care in the post-transplant outpatient clinic of Hospital Universitario Walter Cantidio of Universidade Federal do Ceará (HUWC/UFC), in Fortaleza- Ceará in the period of April to October of 2011. The aim of the present study was to describe the pharmaceutical interventions performed in a Pharmaceutical Care service structured in the liver and kidney transplant outpatient clinic of an academic hospital. The Pharmaceutical interventions (PI) were classified according to Sabater et al.(2005), with significance based on Riba et al.(2000) and the Negative Outcomes associated with Medication (NOM) established at the Third Consensus of Granada. Statistical analyses were performed using the Epi Info v.3.5.1 program and hypothesis tests were done with the SigmaPlot v.10.0 program. A chi-squared (X²) test was utilized for statistical analysis of the sample. A total of 97 patients were followed, where 54 problems related to medications were identified and 139 PI performed. The main PI were in education of the patient about treatment (n=111; 80%) (p<0.05), while the significance of all interventions were appropriate, where 83.4% (n=116) of PI performed in the study period were shown to be "significant" (p<0.05). Through pharmaceutical care, the pharmacist is capable of monitoring the pharmacotherapeutic treatment and intervening when necessary, while being part of the multiprofessional team caring for the transplant patient.


Trata-se de um estudo de descritivo e prospectivo, realizado durante o atendimento farmacêutico nos ambulatórios de pós-transplante do Hospital Universitário Walter Cantídio da Universidade Federal do Ceará (HUWC/UFC), em Fortaleza-Ceará no período de abril a outubro de 2011. O presente trabalho objetiva apresentar as intervenções farmacêuticas realizadas em um serviço de Atenção Farmacêutica (ATENFAR) estruturado nos ambulatórios do transplante hepático e renal de um Hospital Universitário. As intervenções farmacêuticas (IF) foram classificadas de acordo com Sabater et al.(2005), a significância baseadas em Riba et al.(2000) e os Resultados Negativos associados a Medicamentos (RNM) fundamentados no Terceiro Consenso de Granada. As análises estatísticas foram realizadas no programa Epi Info v.3.5.1 e os testes de hipótese foram feitos no programa SigmaPlot v.10.0. O teste estatístico utilizado para análise da amostra foi o qui-quadrado (X²). Foram acompanhados 97 pacientes, identificados 54 problemas relacionados aos medicamentos e realizadas 139 intervenções farmacêuticas. As principais IF realizadas foram na educação do paciente sobre o tratamento (n=111; 80%) (p<0,05), já enquanto a significância todas as intervenções foram apropriadas, sendo que 83,4% (n=116) das IF realizadas no período do estudo mostram ser "significantes" (p<0,05). O farmacêutico, através do exercício da ATENFAR, é capaz de monitorar o tratamento farmacoterapêutico e intervir, quando necessário, integrando-se a equipe multiprofissional no cuidado ao paciente transplantado.


Subject(s)
Humans , /statistics & numerical data , Transplant Recipients/classification , Hospitals, University/classification , Kidney Transplantation , Liver Transplantation , Drug Therapy , Evaluation of the Efficacy-Effectiveness of Interventions , Patient Safety/statistics & numerical data
18.
Rev. cuba. farm ; 45(2): 235-243, Apr.-June 2011.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-615148

ABSTRACT

Se evaluó el impacto de un servicio de seguimiento farmacoterapéutico implementado a 30 pacientes con diabetes mellitus tipo 2, dispensarizados en la Farmacia Principal Municipal Santiago de Cuba, según la metodología Dáder, en el período comprendido desde enero del 2009 hasta enero de 2010. El índice de impacto de la estabilidad clínica de los pacientes resultó moderado, mientras que en las intervenciones farmacéuticas aceptadas y el nivel de satisfacción de los pacientes, los índices de impacto obtenidos fueron elevados, por lo que el impacto global del servicio de seguimiento farmacoterapéutico implementado para la atención de estos fue considerado alto


The impact of a pharmacotherapy follow-up service was assessed in 30 patients dispensarized in municipal main drugstore of Santiago de Cuba according to Dáder's methodology from January, 2009 to January, 2010. The level of the clinical stability impact of patients was qualified as moderate, whereas in the accepted pharmaceutical interventions and at level of patient's satisfaction, the rates of impact achieved were high thus; the global above mentioned service repercussion was also qualified as high


Subject(s)
Follow-Up Studies , Patient Satisfaction , Pharmaceutical Services
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL