Heidelberg University, Medical Faculty Heidelberg/Heidelberg University Hospital, Internal Medicine IX - Department of Clinical Pharmacology and Pharmacoepidemiology, Cooperation Unit Clinical Pharmacy, Im Neuenheimer Feld 410, 69120, Heidelberg, Germany.
Joined Discharge Management Project Group of the Federal Association of German Hospital Pharmacists (ADKA) e.V. and the German Pharmaceutical Society (DPhG) e. V., Alt-Moabit 96/Varrentrappstraße 40-42, 10559/60486, Berlin/Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Aug 27;24(1):993. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-11208-4.
While successful information transfer and seamless medication supply are fundamental to medication safety during hospital-to-home transitions, disruptions are frequently reported. In Germany, new legal requirements came into force in 2017, strengthening medication lists and discharge summaries as preferred means of information transfer. In addition to previous regulations - such as dispensing medication at discharge by hospital pharmacies - hospital physicians were now allowed to issue discharge prescriptions to be supplied by community pharmacies. The aim of this survey study was to gain first nationwide insights into how these requirements are implemented and how they impact the continuity of medication information transfer and continuous medication supply.
Two nationwide self-administered online surveys of all hospital and community pharmacies across Germany were developed and conducted from April 17th to June 30th, 2023.
Overall, 31.0% (n = 111) of all German hospital pharmacies and 4.5% (n = 811) of all community pharmacies participated. The majority of those hospital pharmacies reported that patients who were discharged were typically provided with discharge summaries (89.2%), medication lists (59.5%) and if needed, discharge prescriptions (67.6%) and/or required medication (67.6%). About every second community pharmacy (49.0%) indicated that up to half of the recently discharged patients who came to their pharmacy typically presented medication lists. 34.0% of the community pharmacies stated that they typically received a discharge summary from recently discharged patients at least once per week. About three in four community pharmacies (73.3%) indicated that most discharge prescriptions were dispensed in time. However, one-third (31.0%) estimated that half and more of the patients experienced gaps in medication supply. Community pharmacies reported challenges with the legal requirements - such as patients´ poor comprehensibility of medication lists, medication discrepancies, unmet formal requirements of discharge prescriptions, and poor accessibility of hospital staff in case of queries. In comparison, hospital pharmacies named technical issues, time/personnel resources, and deficits in patient knowledge of medication as difficulties.
According to the pharmacies´ perceptions, it can be assumed that discontinuation in medication information transfer and lack of medication supply still occur today during hospital-to-home transitions, despite the new legal requirements. Further research is necessary to supplement these results by the perspectives of other healthcare professionals and patients in order to identify efficient strategies.
尽管在医院到家庭的过渡期间成功的信息传递和无缝的药物供应是药物安全的基础,但经常会出现中断。在德国,新的法律要求于 2017 年生效,加强了药物清单和出院摘要作为信息传递的首选方式。除了以前的规定(例如在出院时由医院药房发放药物)外,医院医生现在还可以开出出院处方,由社区药房供应。这项调查研究的目的是首次在全国范围内了解这些要求的实施情况,以及它们如何影响药物信息传递的连续性和药物的持续供应。
从 2023 年 4 月 17 日至 6 月 30 日,开发并进行了两次针对德国所有医院和社区药房的全国性在线自我管理调查。
总体而言,31.0%(n=111)的德国医院药房和 4.5%(n=811)的社区药房参与了调查。大多数医院药房报告说,出院的患者通常会收到出院摘要(89.2%)、药物清单(59.5%)和必要时的出院处方(67.6%)和/或所需药物(67.6%)。大约一半的社区药房(49.0%)表示,最近到他们药房就诊的出院患者中,有一半左右通常会出示药物清单。34.0%的社区药房表示,他们通常每周至少收到一次最近出院患者的出院摘要。大约四分之三的社区药房(73.3%)表示,大多数出院处方都能及时发放。然而,三分之一(31.0%)的社区药房估计,一半以上的患者在药物供应方面存在缺口。社区药房报告了与法律要求相关的挑战,例如患者对药物清单的理解能力差、药物差异、出院处方未满足正式要求以及在有疑问时无法联系到医院工作人员。相比之下,医院药房将技术问题、时间/人员资源以及患者对药物的了解不足列为困难。
根据药房的看法,可以假设尽管有新的法律要求,但在医院到家庭的过渡期间,药物信息传递的中断和药物供应的缺乏仍然存在。为了补充这些结果,需要进一步研究其他医疗保健专业人员和患者的观点,以确定有效的策略。