Migliozzi Daniel R, Zullo Andrew R, Collins Christine, Elsaid Khaled A
Daniel R. Migliozzi, Pharm.D., BCPS, is Clinical Pharmacy Specialist, Renal Transplant, Department of Pharmacy, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence. Andrew R. Zullo, Pharm.D., is a doctoral student, Department of Health Services, Policy and Practice, Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, and Staff Pharmacist, Department of Pharmacy, Rhode Island Hospital. Christine Collins, B.S.Pharm., M.B.A., is Director, Department of Pharmacy, Rhode Island Hospital. Khaled A. Elsaid, Pharm.D., Ph.D., is Associate Professor, Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, MCPHS University, Boston, MA.
Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2015 Nov 15;72(22):1987-92. doi: 10.2146/ajhp140810.
The implementation and outcomes of a program combining electronic home blood pressure monitoring (HBPM) and pharmacist-provided medication therapy management (MTM) services in a renal transplantation clinic are described.
Patients enrolled in the program were provided with a computer-enabled blood pressure monitor. A dedicated renal transplantation pharmacist was integrated into the renal transplantation team under a collaborative care practice agreement. The collaborative care agreement allowed the pharmacist to authorize medication additions, deletions, and dosage changes. Comprehensive disease and blood pressure education was provided by a clinical pharmacist. In the pretransplantation setting, the pharmacist interviewed the renal transplant candidate and documents allergies, verified the patient's medication profile, and identified and assessed barriers to medication adherence. A total of 50 renal transplant recipients with at least one recorded home blood pressure reading and at least one year of follow-up were included in our analysis. A significant reduction in mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure values were observed at 30, 90, 180, and 360 days after enrollment in the program (p < 0.05). Pharmacist interventions were documented for 37 patients. Medication-related problems accounted for 46% of these interventions and included dosage modifications, regimen changes, and mitigation of barriers to medication access and adherence.
Implementation of electronic HBPM and pharmacist-provided MTM services implemented in a renal transplant clinic was associated with sustained improvements in blood pressure control. Incorporation of a pharmacist in the renal transplant clinic resulted in the detection and resolution of medication-related problems.
描述在肾移植诊所开展的一项结合电子家庭血压监测(HBPM)和药剂师提供的药物治疗管理(MTM)服务的项目的实施情况及结果。
参与该项目的患者配备了一台具备计算机功能的血压监测仪。根据合作护理实践协议,一名专门的肾移植药剂师被纳入肾移植团队。该合作护理协议允许药剂师批准药物的增减及剂量调整。临床药剂师提供了全面的疾病和血压教育。在移植前阶段,药剂师对肾移植候选人进行访谈并记录过敏情况,核实患者的用药情况,识别并评估用药依从性的障碍。我们的分析纳入了50名肾移植受者,他们至少有一次记录的家庭血压读数且至少随访一年。在参与项目后的30、90、180和360天,观察到平均收缩压和舒张压值显著降低(p<0.05)。记录了37名患者的药剂师干预情况。与药物相关的问题占这些干预措施的46%,包括剂量调整、治疗方案改变以及消除用药获取和依从性的障碍。
在肾移植诊所实施电子HBPM和药剂师提供的MTM服务与血压控制的持续改善相关。在肾移植诊所纳入药剂师可发现并解决与药物相关的问题。