Menzies Health Institute Queensland, Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, Auckland University, Auckland, New Zealand.
BMJ Open. 2018 Nov 3;8(11):e026462. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-026462.
The age-adjusted rate of potentially preventable hospitalisations for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people is almost five times the rate of other Australians. Quality use of medicines has an important role in alleviating these differences. This requires strengthening existing medication reviewing services through collaboration between community pharmacists and health workers, and ensuring services are culturally appropriate. This Indigenous Medication Review Service (IMeRSe) study aims to develop and evaluate the feasibility of a culturally appropriate medication management service delivered by community pharmacists in collaboration with Aboriginal health workers.
This study will be conducted in nine Aboriginal health services (AHSs) and their associated community pharmacies in three Australian states over 12 months. Community pharmacists will be trained to improve their awareness and understanding of Indigenous health and cultural issues, to communicate the quality use of medicines effectively, and to strengthen interprofessional relationships with AHSs and their staff. Sixty consumers (with a chronic condition/pregnant/within 2 years post partum and at risk of medication-related problems (MRPs) per site will be recruited, with data collection at baseline and 6 months. The primary outcome is the difference in cumulative incidence of serious MRPs in the 6 months after IMeRSe introduction compared with the 6 months prior. Secondary outcomes include potentially preventable medication-related hospitalisations, medication adherence, total MRPs, psychological and social empowerment, beliefs about medication, treatment satisfaction and health expenditure.
The protocol received approval from Griffith University (HREC/2018/251), Queensland Health Metro South (HREC/18/QPAH/109), Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council of New South Wales (1381/18), Far North Queensland (HREC/18/QCH/86-1256) and the Central Australian HREC (CA-18-3090). Dissemination to Indigenous people and communities will be a priority. Results will be available on the Australian Sixth Community Pharmacy Agreement website and published in peer-reviewed journals.
ACTRN12618000188235; Pre-results.
原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民因潜在可预防而住院的调整年龄比率几乎是其他澳大利亚人的五倍。合理用药在缓解这些差异方面发挥着重要作用。这需要通过社区药剂师和卫生工作者之间的合作加强现有的药物审查服务,并确保服务具有文化适宜性。这项原住民药物审查服务(IMeRSe)研究旨在开发和评估由社区药剂师与原住民卫生工作者合作提供的文化适宜药物管理服务的可行性。
这项研究将在澳大利亚三个州的九个原住民健康服务机构(AHS)及其相关社区药房进行,为期 12 个月。社区药剂师将接受培训,以提高他们对原住民健康和文化问题的认识和理解,有效地沟通合理用药,并加强与 AHS 及其工作人员的跨专业关系。每个地点将招募 60 名(患有慢性病/孕妇/产后 2 年内且有药物相关问题(MRP)风险的消费者),在基线和 6 个月时进行数据收集。主要结果是在引入 IMeRSe 后 6 个月与引入前 6 个月相比,严重 MRP 的累积发生率差异。次要结果包括潜在可预防的药物相关住院治疗、药物依从性、总 MRP、心理和社会赋权、对药物的信念、治疗满意度和健康支出。
该方案获得了格里菲斯大学(HREC/2018/251)、昆士兰卫生大都市南部(HREC/18/QPAH/109)、新南威尔士州原住民健康和医学研究委员会(1381/18)、远北昆士兰(HREC/18/QCH/86-1256)和中澳大利亚 HREC(CA-18-3090)的批准。向原住民和社区传播将是优先事项。结果将在澳大利亚第六次社区药房协议网站上公布,并在同行评议期刊上发表。
ACTRN12618000188235;预结果。