Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia Health Authority, c/o Sherri Fay, 2557, Veterans' Memorial Building, 5955 Veterans' Memorial Lane, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3H 2E1, Canada.
Aging Well with Marjorie, c/o Sherri Fay, 2557, Veterans' Memorial Building, 5955 Veterans' Memorial Lane, Halifax, Nova Scotia, B3H 2E1, Canada.
Res Social Adm Pharm. 2020 Apr;16(4):595-598. doi: 10.1016/j.sapharm.2019.07.004. Epub 2019 Jul 10.
At a recent World Café Workshop on future deprescribing priorities, Canadian researchers identified that, in addition to implementation evaluation and economic analyses, high quality clinical trials require meaningful patient engagement.
The aim was to develop a deprescribing intervention for collaborative primary healthcare clinics and long-term care facilities that have pharmacists integrated in these settings. This manuscript aims to provide a summary of the experience with engaging patients in the development of the deprescribing framework.
Sixteen members of the research team met with six patient representatives (identified by the Maritime SPOR SUPPORT Unit) in a facilitated meeting. The event provided a welcoming environment for all participants; discussion groups ensured a mix of clinical, research and patient voice; and facilitators focused on engaging all voices equally. Initial discussions were structured around four topics: 1) identifying and prioritizing potentially inappropriate medications to reduce or stop; 2) identifying patients appropriate for deprescribing; 3) effectively communicating deprescribing with both patients and prescribers; and 4) measuring satisfaction with the framework. Subsequent discussions used group input to draft an intervention. After the event, participants engaged via e-mail, to refine the proposed intervention.
The facilitated meeting provided helpful insight into patients' interests and changed the shape of the project. For example, patient representatives felt that an age restriction of 65 years of age or older was unfair, as deprescribing may help people younger than 65 years of age. Patient representatives also felt it was crucial to have resources to offer with non-pharmacologic information to increase success of deprescribing. This led to the deprescribing intervention becoming a framework for pharmacist-led deprescribing and a toolbox of supportive patient and healthcare professional resources.
Overall, this process allowed for successful and meaningful patient engagement that aligned well with priorities for deprescribing clinical trials.
在最近的一次关于未来减药优先事项的世界咖啡研讨会工作坊上,加拿大研究人员确定,除了实施评估和经济分析外,高质量的临床试验还需要有意义的患者参与。
旨在为在这些环境中整合了药剂师的协作式初级保健诊所和长期护理机构开发一种减药干预措施。本文旨在提供在制定减药框架过程中让患者参与的经验总结。
研究团队的 16 名成员与 6 名由海洋 SPOR 支持单位确定的患者代表在一次促进会议中会面。该活动为所有参与者提供了一个欢迎的环境;讨论小组确保了临床、研究和患者声音的混合;并确保主持人平等地关注所有声音。最初的讨论围绕四个主题展开:1)确定和优先考虑需要减少或停止的潜在不适当药物;2)确定适合减药的患者;3)与患者和处方者有效沟通减药;4)衡量对框架的满意度。随后的讨论使用小组的意见草案干预措施。活动结束后,参与者通过电子邮件参与,以完善拟议的干预措施。
促进会议提供了对患者兴趣的有益见解,并改变了项目的形状。例如,患者代表认为 65 岁或以上的年龄限制不公平,因为减药可能有助于 65 岁以下的人。患者代表还认为,提供非药物信息的资源对于提高减药的成功率至关重要。这导致减药干预措施成为一个由药剂师主导的减药框架和一个支持患者和医疗保健专业人员的资源工具包。
总体而言,这个过程实现了成功和有意义的患者参与,与减药临床试验的优先事项非常吻合。