Multidisciplinary intervention to identify and resolve drug-related problems in Norwegian nursing homes
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Åpne
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2445172Utgivelsesdato
2010Metadata
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Originalversjon
Halvorsen, K.H., Ruths, S., Granas, A.G. & Viktil, K.K. (2010) Multidisciplinary intervention to identify and resolve drug-related problems in Norwegian nursing homes. Scandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, 28(2), s. 82-88. 10.3109/02813431003765455Sammendrag
Objective: to describe an innovative team intervention to identify and resolve DRPs (drug-related problems) in Norwegian nursing homes. Design: descriptive intervention study. Setting: three nursing homes in Bergen, Norway. Subjects: a total of 142 long-term care patients (106 women, mean age 86.9 years). Results: systematic medication reviews performed by pharmacists in 142 patients revealed altogether 719 DRPs, of which 504 were acknowledged by the patients ’ physician and nurses, and 476 interventions were completed. “ Unnecessary drug ” and “ Monitoring required ” were the most frequently identified DRPs. Drugs for treating the nervous system and the alimentary tract and metabolism were most commonly questioned. Conclusions: the multidisciplinary team intervention was suitable to identify and resolve drug-related problems in nursing home settings. Systematic medication reviews and involvement of pharmacists in clinical teams should therefore be implemented on a regular basis to achieve and maintain high-quality drug therapy.
Beskrivelse
Beskriver hvordan et innovativt team identifiserte LRP hos beboere i sykehjem.