Deas Crystal M, Clark Serena K, Freeman Maisha Kelly
Samford University, McWhorter School of Pharmacy.
James A. Haley Veterans Hospital.
Innov Pharm. 2020 Mar 11;11(1). doi: 10.24926/iip.v11i1.2320. eCollection 2020.
Effective diabetes pharmacotherapy often involves injectable medications, which if used inappropriately represents a type of unintentional medication nonadherence that leads to poor outcomes.
The primary objective of this study was to assess the percent of patients who accurately prepared, administered, stored, and disposed of their injectable diabetes medication. Secondary objectives included comparing the accuracy of injectable use among those with diabetes <5 years vs. ≥ 5 years duration and those with limited vs. proficient health literacy.
This was a prospective analysis conducted on a convenience sample of patients who received a pilot pharmacist-led, quality improvement service at an urban, ambulatory care clinic. The service components included health literacy screening, using the Rapid Assessment of Adult Literacy in Medicine - Short Form (REALM-SF) tool, evaluation of injectable technique by use of a standardized questionnaire, and provision of medication education. Duration of diabetes was determined by patient self-report. Chi-square and Fisher's exact tests were utilized to assess accuracy of injectable technique in two group comparisons: (1) patients with limited vs. proficient health literacy and (2) patients with diabetes <5 years vs. ≥5 years.
Thirty-five patients were included in the analysis. Despite the majority (71.4%) of patients reporting prior education on injectable use, 54.3% reported at least one error in product use. Significant findings noted were that those with limited health literacy had higher rates of accurately using the skin-fold technique and appropriate angle for injection vs. those with proficient health literacy (p<0.05 for both comparisons). Likewise, more patients in the cohort of diabetes duration ≥5 years accurately rotated the injection site vs. those with a duration <5 years (p=0.001).
Errors in injectable technique were common in this study and spanned across health literacy levels and duration of diabetes. Patients prescribed injectable diabetes medications should be routinely educated on proper technique for use.
有效的糖尿病药物治疗通常涉及注射药物,如果使用不当,这是一种无意的用药不依从性,会导致不良后果。
本研究的主要目的是评估准确准备、注射、储存和处理其注射用糖尿病药物的患者百分比。次要目的包括比较糖尿病病程<5年与≥5年患者以及健康素养有限与健康素养较高患者之间注射用药的准确性。
这是一项前瞻性分析,对在城市门诊护理诊所接受由药剂师主导的试点质量改进服务的便利样本患者进行。服务内容包括使用医学成人识字率快速评估简表(REALM-SF)工具进行健康素养筛查、使用标准化问卷评估注射技术以及提供药物教育。糖尿病病程由患者自我报告确定。卡方检验和费舍尔精确检验用于评估两组比较中注射技术的准确性:(1)健康素养有限与健康素养较高的患者;(2)糖尿病病程<5年与≥5年的患者。
35名患者纳入分析。尽管大多数(71.4%)患者报告曾接受过注射用药方面的教育,但54.3%的患者报告在产品使用中至少出现一处错误。值得注意的重要发现是,健康素养有限的患者与健康素养较高的患者相比,准确使用皮褶技术和合适注射角度的比例更高(两项比较p均<0.05)。同样,糖尿病病程≥5年的患者队列中,与病程<5年的患者相比,更多患者能准确轮换注射部位(p = 0.001)。
本研究中注射技术错误很常见,且跨越了健康素养水平和糖尿病病程。应定期对开具注射用糖尿病药物的患者进行正确使用技术的教育。