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1.
Front Pharmacol ; 13: 844122, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35422698

RESUMO

Background: Hypernatremia is a serious event that can occur during intravenous (IV) treatment with fosfomycin, and it can also be caused by a wrong drug preparation. Considering the clinical significance of hypernatremia, we decided to carry out two studies by using two different data sources with the aim to evaluate cases of IV fosfomycin-induced hypernatremia. Methods: A retrospective medical record review was performed from June 2017 to June 2019 using data from two hospitals in Southern Italy. The information collected was related to the patients, the antibiotic treatment regimen, type of adverse drug reaction (ADR), hypernatremia severity classification, and drug withdrawal due to ADRs. Moreover, a pharmacovigilance study was performed from the date of the European marketing authorization of fosfomycin to October 11, 2021, using data reported on the European website of suspected ADRs. Information related to the patient characteristics, treatment, hypernatremia, and type of reporter was retrieved. Results: From the retrospective medical record review, a total of 62 patients (48 men and 14 women) in treatment with fosfomycin were identified, of which 17 experienced ADRs. Specifically, 11 patients experienced hypernatremia. During the period from June 2017 to June 2018, a total of 63.7% of hypernatremia events were related to the wrong reconstitution of the drug. According to these results, a surveillance and training campaign about the correct drug reconstitution was managed. However, from June 2018 to June 2019, we still had four new hypernatremia cases. Drug withdrawal occurred in only one patient with hypernatremia. From the pharmacovigilance study, a total of 25 cases of IV fosfomycin-induced hypernatremia were retrieved. No substantial difference was found for patients' distribution by sex. Most cases were classified as serious (68%) and reported "Recovered/resolved" as the outcome (44%). In the majority of cases, fosfomycin was the only suspected drug reported (72%). Conclusion: Our results show that training campaigns on the correct drug preparation need to be strengthened to allow a reduction of hypernatremia cases. Moreover, when close monitoring and management is performed by the infectious disease (ID) specialist and hospital pharmacist, there also is a reduction in antibiotic withdrawal due to hypernatremia.

2.
Int J Clin Pharm ; 44(4): 1037-1045, 2022 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35211832

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Effective communication strategies in health care help to enhance patient empowerment and improve clinical outcomes. OBJECTIVE: Adapt the original Communication Assessment (CAT) instrument for the pharmacist profession (CAT-Pharm) and to test its validity and reliability in two different settings. SETTING: Five hospital pharmacies in Italy and five community pharmacies in Malta. METHOD: Pilot study involving a standardized multi-step process adhering to internationally accepted and recommended guidelines. Corrections and adjustments to the translation addressed linguistic factors and cultural components. CAT-Pharm, compared to the original CAT, maintained 10 out of the 14 items: one was slightly modified; three were changed to better fit the pharmacist role; one was added. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: CAT-Pharm development and testing its practicality to assess patient perceptions of pharmacists' interpersonal and communication skills. RESULTS: CAT-Pharm was tested on 97 patients in the Italian setting and 150 patients in the Maltese setting to assess the practicality of the tool and its usefulness in investigating gaps and priorities for improving pharmacist-patient communication. Results Show reliability and internal validity of the CAT-Pharm tool. The analysis of patient perceptions of communication with the pharmacist in Italy indicated differences from that in Malta. The different settings provided insight into the utility of CAT-Pharm. CONCLUSION: This study provided a valid and reliable tool that could be applied to assess patient perception of the pharmacist's communication abilities.


Assuntos
Serviços Comunitários de Farmácia , Farmácias , Comunicação , Humanos , Farmacêuticos , Projetos Piloto , Papel Profissional , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
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