Bacci Jennifer L, Zaraa Sabra, Stergachis Andy, Simic Grant, White H Steve
Department of Pharmacy, University of Washington School of Pharmacy, 1959 NE Pacific Street, Box 357630, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Department of Pharmacy, University of Washington School of Pharmacy, 1959 NE Pacific Street, Box 357630, Seattle, WA 98195, USA; Department of Global Health, University of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, WA, USA.
Epilepsy Behav. 2021 Apr;117:107850. doi: 10.1016/j.yebeh.2021.107850. Epub 2021 Feb 23.
To identify and describe studies about pharmacist-provided services for people with epilepsy and their caregivers.
PubMed/MEDLINE and EMBASE were searched for articles that were: (1) written in English, (2) published in 1985 or later, (3) a peer-reviewed empirical study or practice report, and (4) describing an intervention provided by a pharmacist for people with epilepsy and/or their caregivers in an outpatient pharmacy setting. The abstracts and full text, when necessary, were reviewed by two investigators to assess eligibility. Data were extracted from each article by two investigators using a standardized abstraction form based on the Pharmacist Patient Care Services Intervention Reporting (PaCIR) checklist. Data elements of interest included components of service, mode of service delivery, frequency, number and duration of sessions for the service, roles and responsibilities of the community pharmacist, type of community pharmacy, outcomes and measures evaluated along with data sources, and findings and results. Risk of bias was not assessed due to the descriptive nature of the review.
Twelve articles were included, seven of which reported services conducted in the United States. The most common service reported was medication management (n = 7) followed by education and counseling (n = 4). One article described a care coordination documentation tool that could be used by pharmacists and physicians in epilepsy care. Most interventions were evaluated using observational designs (n = 5) or did not have an evaluation component (n = 4).
This review provides examples of community pharmacists providing care to people living with epilepsy that extend beyond dispensing medications. Findings demonstrate that there is little published evidence on community pharmacists' contributions to epilepsy care and suggest opportunities for further exploration and innovation. This review serves as the first step in a project that seeks to develop a stakeholder-driven community pharmacist integrated population health intervention for people living with epilepsy.
识别并描述有关药剂师为癫痫患者及其护理人员提供服务的研究。
在PubMed/MEDLINE和EMBASE数据库中检索符合以下条件的文章:(1)英文撰写;(2)1985年或之后发表;(3)经过同行评审的实证研究或实践报告;(4)描述药剂师在门诊药房环境中为癫痫患者和/或其护理人员提供的干预措施。必要时,由两名研究人员对摘要和全文进行审查以评估入选资格。两名研究人员使用基于药剂师患者护理服务干预报告(PaCIR)清单的标准化摘要表格从每篇文章中提取数据。感兴趣的数据元素包括服务的组成部分、服务提供方式、频率、服务的 sessions 数量和时长、社区药剂师的角色和职责、社区药房类型、评估的结果和措施以及数据来源,还有研究结果。由于本综述的描述性质,未评估偏倚风险。
纳入12篇文章,其中7篇报告了在美国开展的服务。报告的最常见服务是药物管理(n = 7),其次是教育和咨询(n = 4)。一篇文章描述了一种护理协调记录工具,可供药剂师和医生在癫痫护理中使用。大多数干预措施采用观察性设计进行评估(n = 5)或没有评估部分(n = 4)。
本综述提供了社区药剂师为癫痫患者提供超出配药范围护理的实例。研究结果表明,关于社区药剂师对癫痫护理贡献的已发表证据很少,并提出了进一步探索和创新的机会。本综述是一个项目的第一步,该项目旨在为癫痫患者开发一种由利益相关者驱动的社区药剂师综合人群健康干预措施。