402 resultados para PHARMACISTS
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A new concept for in vitro visual evaluation of sun protection factor (SPF) of cosmetic formulations based on a supramolecular ultraviolet (UV) dosimeter was clearly demonstrated. The method closely parallels the method validated for in vivo evaluation and relies on the determination of the slightest perceptible bleaching of an iron-complex dye/nanocrystallinetitanium dioxide interface (UV dosimeter) in combination with an artificial skin substrate simulating the actual human skin in the presence and absence of a cosmetic formulation. The successful evaluation of SPF was ensured by the similarity of the erythema response of our dosimeter and human skin to UV light irradiation. A good linear correlation of in vitro and in vivo data up to SPF 40 confirmed the effectiveness of such a simple, cheap, and fast method. In short, here we unravel a convenient and accessible visual FPS evaluation method that can help improving the control on cosmetic products contributing to the reduction of skin cancer, one of the critical public health issues nowadays. (C) 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 101:726732, 2012
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The market for cosmeceuticals continues with significant annual growth, but today consumers are more aware of nutritional products that contribute to both skin health and disease prevention. In the last 10 years, pharmacists, chemists, nutritionists, and physicians have been working together to develop new nutritional applications to satisfy peoples needs and demands. As a recent result of convergence phenomenon between cosmetics and food industries, nutricosmetics is a blurry area unfamiliar to many consumers and sometimes even to foods and cosmetics experts. Characterized by oral supplementation of nutrients, nutricosmetics are also known as beauty pills,beauty from within, and even oral cosmetics. The major claim is the antiaging effect, reducing wrinkles by fighting free radicals generated by solar radiation. Among the ingredients used in nutricosmetics, antioxidants represent the most crucial. The best-known antioxidants are carotenoids (beta-carotene, lycopene, lutein, zeaxanthin, and astaxanthin) and polyphenols (anthocyanidins, catechins, flavonoids, tannins, and procyanidins). This study presents an overview about the concept of nutricosmetics and gives us information about the difference between nutricosmetics, nutraceuticals, and cosmeceuticals. The article also discusses about carotenoids and polyphenols, two classes of ingredients often employed in such products.
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Purpose. The primary objective of this study was to investigate the incidence of drug-drug interactions (DDIs) related to adverse drug reactions (ADRs) in elderly outpatients who attended public primary healthcare units in a southeastern region of Brazil. The secondary objective was to investigate the possible predictors of DDI-related ADRs. Methods. A prospective cohort study was conducted between November 1, 2010, and November 31, 2011, in the primary public healthcare system in the Ourinhos micro-region in Brazil. Patients who were at least 60 years old, with at least one potential DDI, were eligible for inclusion in the study. Eligible patients were assessed by clinical pharmacists for DDI-related ADRs for 4 months. The causality of DDI-related ADRs was assessed independently by four clinicians using three decisional algorithms. The incidence of DDI-related ADRs during the study period was calculated. Logistic regression analysis was used to study DDI-related ADR predictors. Results. A total of 433 patients completed the study. The incidence of DDI-related ADRs was 6.5%. A multivariate analysis indicated that the adjusted odds ratios (ORs) rose from 0.91 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.75-1.12, p = 0.06) in patients aged 65-69 years to 4.40 (95% CI = 3.00-6.12, p < 0.01) in patients aged 80 years or older. Patients who presented two to three diagnosed diseases presented lower adjusted ORs (OR = 0.93 [95% CI = 0.68-1.18, p = 0.08]) than patients who presented six or more diseases (OR = 1.12 [95% CI = 1.02-2.01, p < 0.01]). Elderly patients who took five or more drugs had a significantly higher risk of DDI-related ADRs (OR = 2.72 [95% CI = 1.92-3.12, p < 0.01]) than patients who took three to four drugs (OR = 0.93 [95% CI = 0.74-1.11, p = 0.06]). No significant difference was found with regard to sex (OR = 1.08 [95% CI 0.48-2.02, p = 0.44]). Conclusion. The incidence of DDI-related ADRs in elderly outpatients was significant, and most of the events presented important clinical consequences. Because clinicians still have difficulty managing this problem, highlighting the factors that increase the risk of DDI-related ADRs is essential. Polypharmacy was found to be a significant predictor of DDI-related ADRs in our sample.
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Literature data relevant to the decision to allow a waiver of in vivo bioequivalence (BE) testing for the approval of immediate-release (IR) solid oral dosage forms containing stavudine (d4T) are reviewed. According to Biopharmaceutics Classification System (BCS), d4T can be assigned to BCS class I. No problems with BE of IR d4T formulations containing different excipients and produced by different manufacturing methods have been reported and, hence, the risk of bioinequivalence caused by these factors appears to be low. Furthermore, d4T has a wide therapeutic index. It is concluded that a biowaiver is appropriate for IR solid oral dosage forms containing d4T as the single active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) provided that (a) the test product contains only excipients present in the IR d4T drug products that have been approved in a number of countries for the same dosage form, and (b) both test product and its comparator are either very rapidly dissolving or rapidly dissolving with similarity of dissolution profiles demonstrated at pH 1.2, 4.5, and 6.8. (c) 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. and the American Pharmacists Association J Pharm Sci 101:1016, 2012
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Ein wichtiger Baustein für den langfristigen Erfolg einer Lebertransplantation ist die Compliance mit der lebenslang einzunehmenden immunsuppressiven Therapie. Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde erstmals mittels MEMS® die Compliance bei lebertransplantierten Patienten untersucht, deren Transplantation einige Jahre zurücklag. Rekrutiert wurden Patienten, die vor 2, 5, 7 oder 10 Jahren (Gruppe 2 y.p.t., 5 y.p.t., 7 y.p.t., 10 y.p.t.) in der Universitätsmedizin Mainz lebertransplantiert wurden. 39 Patienten nahmen an der prospektiven Anwendungsbeobachtung teil. Die Compliance wurde mittels MEMS® über eine Beobachtungszeit von 6 Monaten erfasst. Bei der MEMS®-Auswertung war zu vermuten, dass 10 Patienten diese nicht wie vorgesehen verwendet hatten. Folglich konnten die mittels MEMS® gemessenen Compliance-Parameter nur für 29 Patienten valide ermittelt werden. Die mittlere Dosing Compliance betrug 81 ± 21 %, wobei die Gruppe 2 y.p.t. mit 86 ± 14 % bessere Werte zu verzeichnen hatte als die Gruppe 5 y.p.t. (75 ± 27 %) und 7 y.p.t. (74 ± 28 %). Die Ergebnisse waren jedoch nicht signifikant unterschiedlich (p=0,335, Kruskal-Wallis-Test). Unter Einbeziehung aller mittels MEMS® gemessenen Compliance-Parameter wurden 19 von 29 Patienten (66 %) als compliant eingestuft. Bei der Analyse der Gesamtcompliance basierend auf den subjektiven Compliance-Messmethoden (Morisky-Fragebogen, MESI-Fragebogen, Selbsteinschätzung), der Arzneimittel-Blutspiegel und der Anzahl an Abstoßungsreaktionen, in der alle 39 Patienten einbezogen werden konnten, wurden 35 Patienten (90 %) als compliant eingestuft. rnIm zweiten Teil der Arbeit wurde die Etablierung und Bewertung eines intersektoralen Pharmazeutischen Betreuungskonzepts für lebertransplantierte Patienten untersucht. Erstmals wurden anhand eines entwickelten schnittstellenübergreifenden, integrierten Betreuungskonzepts niedergelassene Apotheker in die Pharmazeutische Betreuung lebertransplantierter Patienten eingebunden. 20 Patienten wurden rekrutiert und während ihres stationären Aufenthaltes nach Transplantation pharmazeutisch betreut. Die Betreuung umfasste eine intensive Patientenschulung mit drei bis vier Gesprächen durch einen Krankenhausapotheker. Während des stationären Aufenthaltes wurden arzneimittelbezogene Probleme erkannt, gelöst und dokumentiert. Bei Entlassung stellte der Krankenhausapotheker einen Medikationsplan für den Hausarzt sowie für den niedergelassenen Apotheker aus und führte mit den Patienten ein ausführliches Entlassungsgespräch. Darüber hinaus wurden den Patienten Arzneimitteleinnahmepläne und eine Patienteninformation über ihr immunsuppressives Arzneimittel übergeben. 15 Patienten konnten daraufhin ambulant von niedergelassenen Apothekern pharmazeutisch weiterbetreut werden. Das kooperierende pharmazeutische Personal wurde durch ein eigens für die Studie erstelltes Manual zur Pharmazeutischen Betreuung lebertransplantierter Patienten geschult und unterstützt. Die niedergelassenen Apotheker sollten die Patienten in ihrer Arzneimitteltherapie begleiten, indem Beratungsgespräche geführt und arzneimittelbezogene Probleme erkannt und gelöst wurden. Die Nutzeffekte der intensiven Pharmazeutischen Betreuung konnte anhand verschiedener Erhebungsinstrumente dargelegt werden. Im Ergebnis resultierte eine hohe Zufriedenheit der Patienten und Apotheker mit dem Betreuungskonzept, die mittels Selbstbeurteilungsfragebögen ermittelt wurde. Die Compliance der Patienten wurde anhand des Morisky- und MESI-Fragebogens, der Selbsteinschätzung der Patienten, Blutspiegelbestimmungen sowie der Einschätzung durch den niedergelassenen Apotheker bestimmt. 86 % der Patienten wurden als compliant eingeordnet. Die Kenntnisse der Patienten über ihre immunsuppressive Therapie, welche anhand von Interviews erfragt wurden, lagen auf einem sehr hohen Niveau. Abschließend kann festgestellt werden, dass die Pharmazeutische Betreuung lebertransplantierter Patienten in den niedergelassenen Apotheken durchführbar ist. Anhand der Dokumentationsprotokolle lässt sich allerdings nur sehr schwer beurteilen, in welchem Maße die Betreuung tatsächlich erfolgte. Das tatsächliche vorliegen einer mangelnden Betreuung oder aber eine lückenhafte Dokumentation der Betreuungsleistung war nicht zu differenzieren. Ein limitierender Faktor für die intensivierte Betreuung ist sicherlich der erhebliche Aufwand für nur einen Patienten mit einem seltenen Krankheitsbild. Das Erkennen und Lösen von 48 ABP durch den Krankenhausapotheker und 32 ABP durch die niedergelassenen Apotheker, d. h. insgesamt 4,5 ABP pro Patient zeigt, dass die Pharmazeutische Betreuung einen wichtigen Beitrag für eine qualitätsgesicherte Arzneimitteltherapie leistet. Die intersektorale Pharmazeutische Betreuung stellt eine wesentliche Hilfe und Unterstützung der Patienten im sicheren Umgang mit ihrer Arzneimitteltherapie dar.rn
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Applikationsfertige Zytostatikazubereitungen werden heute unter der Verantwortung eines Apothekers in zentralisierten Herstellungsbereichen hergestellt. Weil die Verordnung der Chemotherapie ein großes Fehlerrisiko birgt, ist konsequentes Verordnungsmonitoring ein wesentlicher Teilprozess der zentralen Zytostatikazubereitung. rnDie aktuelle Umsetzung und die Ergebnisse des Verordnungsmonitorings in den Universitätskliniken Deutschlands wurden im Rahmen dieser Arbeit in einer prospektiven Erhebung erfasst. Als häufigste Verordnungsirrtümer wurden Dosisberechnungsfehler (48%), welche als von hoher Relevanz (78%) für die Patientensicherheit angesehen wurden, genannt. Die Inzidenz der Verordnungsfehler betrug durchschnittlich 0,77% bei rund 1950 Verordnungen pro Tag. Das konsequente Verordnungsmonitoring von pharmazeutischer Seite erfolgt höchst effizient und leistet einen hohen Beitrag zur Patienten- und Arzneimitteltherapiesicherheit in der Onkologie.rnFür die Herstellung der applikationsfertiger Zytostatika-Zubereitungen sind fundierte Kenntnisse zu deren physikalisch-chemischen Stabilität erforderlich. Zu neu zugelassenen Zytostatika und insbesondere Biologicals, stehen häufig noch keine Daten zur Stabilität der applikationsfertigen Lösungen zur Verfügung. Die Bestimmung der physikalisch-chemischen Stabilität war daher Gegenstand dieser Arbeit. Die applikationsfertigen Infusionslösungen der Purin-Analoga Nelarabin und Clofarabin (RP-HPLC), sowie des monoklonalen Antiköpers Trastuzumab (SEC, UV-Spektroskopie, SDS-Page), erwiesen sich über einen Zeitraum von mindestens 28 Tagen als stabil. Die Stabilität zweier Camptothecin-Derivate (Topotecan und Irinotecan) beladen auf DC Beads™, wie auch die Ladungskapazität und Kompatibilität mit Kontrastmitteln, wurde ebenfalls bewiesen. rn
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Die Pharmazeutische Betreuung erfolgt mit dem Ziel der Identifikation, Vermeidung und Lösung von Arzneimittelbezogenen Problemen (AbP). In einer prospektiven, randomisierten Studie sollte geprüft werden, ob durch klinisch-pharmazeutische Betreuung bei multimorbiden Patienten mit Polymedikation die Dauer eines AbP verkürzt und ob durch einen individuellen, bebilderten Medikationsplan das Patientenwissen zur aktuellen stationären Medikation verbessert werden kann. In die Studie wurden 244 herzchirurgische Patienten eingeschlossen (≥65 Jahre, ≥5 Arzneimittel). Die Patienten wurden in vier Gruppen randomisiert. Es gab keine statistischen Unterschiede bezüglich der Patientenmerkmale Alter, Geschlecht, Aufnahmediagnose, Anzahl an Arzneimitteln bei der Aufnahme oder stationäre Verweildauer. Das Patientenwissen zur stationären Medikation wurde mittels Fragebogen bei 188 Patienten ermittelt (Rücklaufquote 78%). Zur objektiven Evaluation des Patientenwissens wurden die Patientenangaben zu Einnahmegründen, Arzneimittelbezeichnung, Stärke und Dosierung und zur Therapiedauer gerinnungshemmender Arzneimittel mit der tatsächlichen Medikation verglichen. Insgesamt wurden 1335 AbP bei 235 Patienten detektiert. Durch klinisch-pharmazeutische Betreuung konnten mehr AbP erkannt, frühzeitig gelöst und deren Dauer im Median von 4 auf 2 Tage signifikant (p-Wert<0,001) reduziert werden. Ein bebilderter Medikationsplan verbessert das Patientenwissen über die stationäre Medikation subjektiv und objektiv und erhöht die Motivation der Patienten, die Arzneimittel entsprechend den Einnahmehinweisen auf dem Medikationsplan einzunehmen.
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Zur Verbesserung der Sicherheit und Effektivität der Phenprocoumon-Therapie wurden drei unterschiedliche Untersuchungen durchgeführt.rnZunächst wurde auf Grundlage bekannter Datenbanken und Informationsquellen zu Arznei-mittelinteraktionen (Drugdex, Abda Datenbank, Marcumar® Fachinformation, Coumarin-Interaktionsliste der Federatie van Nederlandse Trombosediensten, Review zu Warfarin-Interaktionen) eine handlungsorientierte Interaktionsdatenbank für Phenprocoumon erstellt. Dazu wurden in einer Übersichtstabelle relevante Informationen zu potentiellen Interaktionen für insgesamt 375 Arzneimittel zusammengestellt. Diese Tabelle wurde durch ein dreiköpfiges Expertenteam begutachtet und die potentiellen Interaktionspartner fünf verschiedenen Schweregraden und Stufen klinischer Relevanz zugeordnet. Für fast 50% der potentiellen Interaktionspartner wurden Handlungen als nicht erforderlich erachtet. Für die restlichen potentiellen Interaktionspartner wurden Handlungen zum klinischen Management der Interaktion in Abhängigkeit vom zeitlichen Zusammenhang mit der Phenprocoumon-Einnahme festgelegt. rnAnschließend wurde in einer Anwendungsbeobachtung der Zusammenhang zwischen der zusätzlichen Einnahme potentiell interagierender Arzneimittel (in der entwickelten Datenbank eingestuft mit dem Schweregrad „hoch“ und „sehr hoch“) und der Häufigkeit von Änderungen der Phenprocoumon-Wochendosis an 116 Patienten untersucht. Das relative Risiko für eine Dosisanpassung war bei Patienten in der Interaktions-Gruppe (n=23) signifikant erhöht (RR=1,9; p<0,001). Als weitere potentielle Einflussfaktoren stellten sich zunehmendes Alter (Alter 80-85 Jahre: RR=2; p<0,05), vielfache Komorbiditäten (4 Komorbiditäten: RR=2,1; p<0,05) und eingeschränkte Nieren- (RR=1,47; p>0,05) und Leberfunktion (RR=1,3; p>0,05) heraus.rnZur Untersuchung der Betreuungsqualität von VKA-Patienten im Thrombosedienst Mainz wurden retrospektiv die Daten von 118 Patienten ausgewertet. Als Qualitätsparameter wurden die prozentuale Häufigkeit von INR-Werten im Zielbereich, die TTR (Time in Therapeutic Range), die Dauer der NMH-Therapie, die Zeit bis zum Erreichen des Zielbereichs und der durchschnittliche Abstand zwischen zwei Kontrollterminen ermittelt. Im Median lag jeder Patient mit 73% der gemessenen INR-Werte und im individuellen Zielbereich. Die TTR betrug im Median 80%. Die Patienten benötigten 7 Tage zum Erreichen des Zielbereiches. Die NMH-Therapie wurde über 8 Tage durchgeführt. Die Patienten kamen im Median alle 11 Tage zu einem Kontrolltermin. Im Benchmark zu international publizierten Qualitätskenn-zahlen zur VKA-Therapie ist die Betreuungsqualität im Thrombosedienst Mainz als sehr gut einzustufen.rn
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Purpose The accuracy, efficiency, and efficacy of four commonly recommended medication safety assessment methodologies were systematically reviewed. Methods Medical literature databases were systematically searched for any comparative study conducted between January 2000 and October 2009 in which at least two of the four methodologies—incident report review, direct observation, chart review, and trigger tool—were compared with one another. Any study that compared two or more methodologies for quantitative accuracy (adequacy of the assessment of medication errors and adverse drug events) efficiency (effort and cost), and efficacy and that provided numerical data was included in the analysis. Results Twenty-eight studies were included in this review. Of these, 22 compared two of the methodologies, and 6 compared three methods. Direct observation identified the greatest number of reports of drug-related problems (DRPs), while incident report review identified the fewest. However, incident report review generally showed a higher specificity compared to the other methods and most effectively captured severe DRPs. In contrast, the sensitivity of incident report review was lower when compared with trigger tool. While trigger tool was the least labor-intensive of the four methodologies, incident report review appeared to be the least expensive, but only when linked with concomitant automated reporting systems and targeted follow-up. Conclusion All four medication safety assessment techniques—incident report review, chart review, direct observation, and trigger tool—have different strengths and weaknesses. Overlap between different methods in identifying DRPs is minimal. While trigger tool appeared to be the most effective and labor-efficient method, incident report review best identified high-severity DRPs.
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BACKGROUND: In 2003 the Swiss federation of pharmacists organized a campaign "sleep disturbances--daytime sleepiness". The goal was to assist pharmacy clients in detecting likely causes of any sleep disturbance or daytime sleepiness through a free of charge screening, and to deliver targeted counselling. For pharmacy practice there are no screening or triage guidelines to assess the severity of sleep and wakefulness disturbances and potential causes for those disturbances. In this paper the outcome of the campaign in terms of feasibility, participation, observed response patterns, sale of over-the-counter (OTC) sleeping pills, and counselling activities is evaluated. METHODS: The Stanford sleep disorders questionnaire and the Epworth sleepiness scale served to identify patterns of symptoms suggestive of four major categories of sleep disorders. The questionnaires were posted on a web-site and the clients' data were entered online in the pharmacies. A report was automatically generated and immediately available online to the pharmacists. The pharmacists documented separately their counselling activities in a pharmacist's activity report. RESULTS: Six hundred and twenty-two (23%) of 2743 pharmacy clients had response patterns suggestive of obstructive sleep apnoea, 418 (15%) of restless-legs-syndrome, 39 (1%) of a sleep disorder potentially associated with a psychiatric condition and 79 (3%) of narcolepsy. An Epworth sleepiness score >10 points was found in 567 (21%). After screening, 2345 (86%) pharmacy clients received targeted counselling. Only 216 (8%) purchased an OTC sleeping pill and 704 (26%) were recommended to consult a physician, but of these, 446 (63%) were already under medical supervision. CONCLUSIONS: The online screening tool for sleep disorders and daytime sleepiness was successfully introduced in Swiss pharmacies. Pharmacies were able to assess the pattern of individual sleep disorders and to identify a possible cause in nearly one-third of the cases.
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PURPOSE: Although critically ill patients usually have various central intravenous (i.v.) lines, numerous drugs have to be infused simultaneously through the same lines. This can result in potentially harmful in-line incompatibility that can cause decreased drug effectiveness or increased microparticle load. To minimize the risk of these medication errors at an anesthesia intensive care unit (ICU), the preparation and administration of continuously infused drugs were standardized and the practicability in daily clinical routine was evaluated. SUMMARY: The concentration and diluent of continuously administered i.v. drugs were standardized. The drugs were grouped according to pH, medical indication, and chemical structure. The ICU staff decided to use multilumen central venous catheters, and each group of drugs was assigned to one lumen. Only drugs that belonged to the same group were infused simultaneously through the same lumen; therefore, intragroup incompatibilities had to be excluded before establishing the new drug administration plan at the ICU. The visual compatibility of 115 clinically reasonable intragroup drug mixtures was investigated. All drug combinations were compatible for six hours except mixtures containing thiopental, which was reassigned to a single-line use. In the following year, the practicability of this drug administration plan was evaluated. No deviations were found in the compliance of the staff prescribing and preparing only standardized concentrations and diluents. Further research to investigate the chemical compatibility of the drugs in these multiple mixtures will follow. CONCLUSION: A project intended to avoid incompatibility among i.v. drugs infused in the intensive care setting included steps to standardize solutions and determine which could be given together.
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This study examines the social and behavioral determinants of two types of primary care, seeing a physician or a pharmacist, for Koreans and evaluates the equity of the Korean national health insurance system. The study applies the Aday and Andersen access framework to cross-sectional data from the 1992 Korean National Health Interview Survey (N = 21,841).^ The study found that in Korea, the elderly were most likely, and children least likely, to have used physician services. Women, household heads, those in small families, and the less educated were more likely than their counterparts to use physician and pharmacist services. Health status and need were important determinants of Koreans seeing a doctor or a pharmacist. Differences in need substantially accounted for the original differences observed between subgroups. Resources associated with having insurance coverage, a regular source of care, and place of residence (rural/urban) ameliorated to some extent the subgroup differences in the use of physicians' and pharmacists' services among Koreans. They were also major independent predictors of access. Having insurance remains a particularly important predictor of who uses physician services. Among the insured, trade-offs in the use of physician and pharmacist services were found in the current system, i.e., uninsured and poor Koreans were more likely to use pharmacist services, while insured and rural Koreans were more likely to use doctor services. Among the insured, cost sharing rates are lower for physician than for pharmacist services. Self-employed persons were less likely than government and industrial workers to use physician services. An underlying expectation under universal health insurance was that the Korean health care system would be equitable. The research results, however, did not fully support this expectation.^ The policy implications of these findings are that measures are required to extend insurance coverage to the uninsured, to equalize differences in benefit packages between health plans, and to expand the availability of physicians in rural areas. Further research is also needed to understand those who do not currently have a regular source of care and why and the access barriers that may exist for selected demographic subgroups (those in large families and unmarried or divorced/widowed persons). ^
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The evolution of pharmaceutical care is identified through a complete review of the literature published in the American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, the sole comprehensive publication of institutional pharmacy practice. The evolution is categorized according to characteristics of structure (organizational structure, the role of the pharmacist), process (drug delivery systems, formulary management, acquiring drug products, methods to impact drug therapy decisions), and outcomes (cost of drug delivery, cost of drug acquisition and use, improved safety, improved health outcomes) recorded from the 1950s through the 1990s. While significant progress has been made in implementing basic drug distribution systems, levels of pharmacy involvement with direct patient care is still limited.^ A new practice framework suggests enhanced direct patient care involvement through increase in the efficiency and effectiveness of traditional pharmacy services. Recommendations advance internal and external organizational structure relationships that position pharmacists to fully use their unique skills and knowledge to impact drug therapy decisions and outcomes. Specific strategies facilitate expansion of the breadth and scope of each process component in order to expand the depth of integration of pharmacy and pharmaceutical care within the broad healthcare environment. Economic evaluation methods formally evaluate the impact of both operational and clinical interventions.^ Outcome measurements include specific recommendations and methods to increase efficiency of drug acquisition, emphasizing pharmacists' roles that impact physician prescribing decisions. Effectiveness measures include those that improve safety of drug distribution systems, decrease the potential of adverse drug therapy events, and demonstrate that pharmaceutical care can significantly contribute to improvement in overall health status.^ The implementation of the new framework is modeled on a case study at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center. The implementation of several new drug distribution methods facilitated the redeployment of personnel from distributive functions to direct patient care activities with significant personnel and drug cost reduction. A cost-benefit analysis illustrates that framework process enhancements produced a benefit-to-cost ratio of 7.9. In addition, measures of effectiveness demonstrated significant levels of safety and enhanced drug therapy outcomes. ^
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BACKGROUND There are no specific recommendations for the design and reporting of studies of children with fever and neutropenia (FN). As a result, there is marked heterogeneity in the variables and outcomes that are reported and new definitions continue to emerge. These inconsistencies hinder the ability of researchers and clinicians to compare, contrast and combine results. The objective was to achieve expert consensus on a core set of variables and outcomes that should be measured and reported, as a minimum, in pediatric FN studies. PROCEDURE The Delphi method was used to achieve consensus among an international group of clinicians, pharmacists, researchers, and patient representatives. Four surveys focusing on (i) the identification of a core set of variables and outcomes; and (ii) definitions of these variables and outcomes, were administered electronically. Consensus was predefined as more than 80% agreement on any statement. RESULTS There were forty-five survey participants and the response rate ranged between 84 and 96%. There was consensus on eight core variables and 10 core outcomes that should be collected and reported in all studies of children with FN. Consensus definitions were identified for all of the core outcomes. CONCLUSION Using the Delphi method, expert consensus on a set of core variables and outcomes, and their corresponding definitions, was achieved. These core sets represent the minimum that should be collected and reported in all studies of children with FN. This will promote collaboration and ensure consistency and comparability between studies.
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Medication reconciliation, with the aim to resolve medication discrepancy, is one of the Joint Commission patient safety goals. Medication errors and adverse drug events that could result from medication discrepancy affect a large population. At least 1.5 million adverse drug events and $3.5 billion of financial burden yearly associated with medication errors could be prevented by interventions such as medication reconciliation. This research was conducted to answer the following research questions: (1a) What are the frequency range and type of measures used to report outpatient medication discrepancy? (1b) Which effective and efficient strategies for medication reconciliation in the outpatient setting have been reported? (2) What are the costs associated with medication reconciliation practice in primary care clinics? (3) What is the quality of medication reconciliation practice in primary care clinics? (4) Is medication reconciliation practice in primary care clinics cost-effective from the clinic perspective? Study designs used to answer these questions included a systematic review, cost analysis, quality assessments, and cost-effectiveness analysis. Data sources were published articles in the medical literature and data from a prospective workflow study, which included 150 patients and 1,238 medications. The systematic review confirmed that the prevalence of medication discrepancy was high in ambulatory care and higher in primary care settings. Effective strategies for medication reconciliation included the use of pharmacists, letters, a standardized practice approach, and partnership between providers and patients. Our cost analysis showed that costs associated with medication reconciliation practice were not substantially different between primary care clinics using or not using electronic medical records (EMR) ($0.95 per patient per medication in EMR clinics vs. $0.96 per patient per medication in non-EMR clinics, p=0.78). Even though medication reconciliation was frequently practiced (97-98%), the quality of such practice was poor (0-33% of process completeness measured by concordance of medication numbers and 29-33% of accuracy measured by concordance of medication names) and negatively (though not significantly) associated with medication regimen complexity. The incremental cost-effectiveness ratios for concordance of medication number per patient per medication and concordance of medication names per patient per medication were both 0.08, favoring EMR. Future studies including potential cost-savings from medication features of the EMR and potential benefits to minimize severity of harm to patients from medication discrepancy are warranted. ^