Gilson Aaron M, Xiong Ka Z, Stone Jamie A, Jacobson Nora, Phelan Cynthia, Reddy Apoorva, Chui Michelle A
Sonderegger Research Center, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Pharmacy.
Social and Administrative Sciences Division, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Pharmacy.
Innov Pharm. 2020 Feb 14;11(1). doi: 10.24926/iip.v11i1.2295. eCollection 2020.
Over-the-counter (OTC) medication use has increased safety risks for adults older than 65. Most older adults purchase OTC medications from community pharmacies, where the considerable distance or visual obstructions between the prescription area and OTC aisles undermine pharmacists' ability to assist patients with OTC medication decisions. An innovative redesign of an abbreviated medication section specifically for older adults (called the Senior Section ) can facilitate pharmacy staff/patient interaction, potentially improving safe medication selection and use. This study evaluated the impact of the Senior Section on the frequency and content of OTC encounters between pharmacy staff and patients.
An intervention mixed-methods design generated data from patient OTC encounters, and interviews with two pharmacists and two technicians, throughout the study. NVivo was used to code interview transcripts, and frequencies and chi-square analyses demonstrated pre/post-intervention comparisons for the OTC encounter variables.
After Senior Section implementation, pharmacy staff were more likely to initiate (and be involved in) patient encounters, address more topics or problem/symptoms, provide details about OTC products, discuss appropriateness of OTC use, and discuss medication classes highlighted in the Senior Section. Pharmacy staff were less likely to need to leave the prescription department for extended periods; they also had fewer prolonged encounters or encounters about product location. Importantly, the Senior Section did not impede pharmacy workflow.
The Senior Section prompted more frequent, effective, and efficient engagements between pharmacy staff and patients, which may substantially reduce OTC-related harms among older adults.
非处方药(OTC)的使用增加了65岁以上成年人的安全风险。大多数老年人从社区药房购买非处方药,而处方药区与非处方药通道之间存在相当长的距离或视觉障碍,这削弱了药剂师协助患者做出非处方药决策的能力。专门为老年人设计的缩写药品区(称为“老年区”)的创新重新设计可以促进药房工作人员与患者之间的互动,有可能改善安全用药的选择和使用。本研究评估了老年区对药房工作人员与患者之间非处方药接触的频率和内容的影响。
在整个研究过程中,采用干预性混合方法设计,从患者非处方药接触以及对两名药剂师和两名技术人员的访谈中收集数据。使用NVivo对访谈记录进行编码,频率和卡方分析展示了非处方药接触变量的干预前后比较。
实施老年区后,药房工作人员更有可能发起(并参与)与患者的接触,讨论更多主题或问题/症状,提供非处方药产品的详细信息,讨论非处方药使用的适宜性,并讨论老年区突出显示的药物类别。药房工作人员不太可能需要长时间离开处方部门;他们的长时间接触或关于产品位置的接触也更少。重要的是,老年区并未妨碍药房的工作流程。
老年区促使药房工作人员与患者之间进行更频繁、有效和高效的互动,这可能会大幅减少老年人中与非处方药相关的危害。