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A stepped wedge randomised controlled trial assessing the efficacy and patient acceptability of virtual clinical pharmacy in rural and remote Australian hospitals

Charles Sturt University
Nott, Shannon ; Fleming, Cristen ; Hawthorn, Gerard ; Luscombe, Georgina ; Allan, Julaine ; Webster, Emma ; Coleman, Clare ; Palazzi, Kerrin ; Dizon, Joshua ; Munro, Alice ; Chambers, Brett
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.6084/m9.figshare.c.7534757&rft.title=A stepped wedge randomised controlled trial assessing the efficacy and patient acceptability of virtual clinical pharmacy in rural and remote Australian hospitals&rft.identifier=10.6084/m9.figshare.c.7534757&rft.publisher=Figshare&rft.description=Abstract Background Despite medication being the most common healthcare intervention and medication-related incidents being common in hospitals, many rural and remote hospitals in Australia lack onsite pharmacy services due to resource constraints. A Virtual Clinical Pharmacy Service (VCPS) staffed by two senior, rural generalist hospital pharmacists assigned to four hospitals each was implemented in rural and remote facilities to determine whether the VCPS increased adherence to National Safety and Quality Health Service Standards (NSQHS). Methods A stepped-wedge randomised controlled trial was employed to sequentially implement a telehealth pharmacy service at one-month intervals in eight hospitals. The primary outcomes were patient-level medication reconciliation completion rates on admission and discharge. Secondary measures evaluated compliance with other NSQHS standards (including Best Possible Medication History, Medication Reconciliation and venous thromboembolism risk assessment), patient outcomes (including representation within 48 h, readmission within 28 days and length of stay), and detection of potential medication-related harms (including pharmacist identified medication related problems, reported medication errors and falls). Patients were invited to complete a patient-reported experience questionnaire. Data were collected from electronic medical records and analysed using mixed logistic regression models to estimate the effectiveness of the VCPS. Antimicrobial usage, falls, and medication errors were analysed at the facility level, while other data were analysed at the patient level. Results Compared to control (n = 535), patients in the intervention period (n = 527) were more likely to have an admission medication reconciliation completed (Odds Ratio (OR) 11.16, 95% confidence interval (CI) 5.59–22.30, p &rft.creator=Nott, Shannon &rft.creator=Fleming, Cristen &rft.creator=Hawthorn, Gerard &rft.creator=Luscombe, Georgina &rft.creator=Allan, Julaine &rft.creator=Webster, Emma &rft.creator=Coleman, Clare &rft.creator=Palazzi, Kerrin &rft.creator=Dizon, Joshua &rft.creator=Munro, Alice &rft.creator=Chambers, Brett &rft.date=2024&rft.relation=http://researchoutput.csu.edu.au/en/publications/46cb5c8c-1a8e-4d3a-857f-32c16f7da0e5&rft.coverage=New South Wales, Australia&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Abstract Background Despite medication being the most common healthcare intervention and medication-related incidents being common in hospitals, many rural and remote hospitals in Australia lack onsite pharmacy services due to resource constraints. A Virtual Clinical Pharmacy Service (VCPS) staffed by two senior, rural generalist hospital pharmacists assigned to four hospitals each was implemented in rural and remote facilities to determine whether the VCPS increased adherence to National Safety and Quality Health Service Standards (NSQHS). Methods A stepped-wedge randomised controlled trial was employed to sequentially implement a telehealth pharmacy service at one-month intervals in eight hospitals. The primary outcomes were patient-level medication reconciliation completion rates on admission and discharge. Secondary measures evaluated compliance with other NSQHS standards (including Best Possible Medication History, Medication Reconciliation and venous thromboembolism risk assessment), patient outcomes (including representation within 48 h, readmission within 28 days and length of stay), and detection of potential medication-related harms (including pharmacist identified medication related problems, reported medication errors and falls). Patients were invited to complete a patient-reported experience questionnaire. Data were collected from electronic medical records and analysed using mixed logistic regression models to estimate the effectiveness of the VCPS. Antimicrobial usage, falls, and medication errors were analysed at the facility level, while other data were analysed at the patient level. Results Compared to control (n = 535), patients in the intervention period (n = 527) were more likely to have an admission medication reconciliation completed (Odds Ratio (OR) 11.16, 95% confidence interval (CI) 5.59–22.30, p < 0.001) in models adjusted for the study period. A similar improvement was observed for discharge medication reconciliation completion (OR 4.07, CI 2.38–6.95, p < 0.001), whereas a 33-fold improvement was seen in Best Possible Medication History completion (OR 33.27, CI 17.53–63.14, p < 0.001). The VCPS documented 879 medication related problems, with 61% of patients having at least one medication-related problem documented by a pharmacist. There was no change in length of stay, falls, readmission rates or reported medication error rates; however, the study was not powered to detect these changes. Patient feedback was positive and comparable to in-person care, with 95% (179/189) reporting their overall experience as ‘good’ or ‘very good.’ No unintended harms were reported. Conclusions The VCPS improved compliance with national standards for medication safety, had high patient acceptability and resulted in the detection of clinically relevant medication-related issues in rural and remote settings. The applicability of virtual pharmacy should be explored in further rural and remote locations in addition to other settings such as metropolitan locations with no onsite clinical pharmacists. Ethics number GWHREC 2019/ETH13355. Trial registration ANZCTR registration number ACTRN12619001757101. Registered on 11/12/2019. Published trial protocol: A stepped wedge trial of efficacy and scalability of a virtual clinical pharmacy service (VCPS) in rural and remote NSW health facilities.

Notes

External Organisations
Western NSW Local Health District; Western NSW Local Health District; University of Sydney; Hunter Medical Research Institute, Australia
Associated Persons
Shannon Nott (Creator); Gerard Hawthorn (Creator); Alice Munro (Creator)Cristen Fleming (Creator); Georgina Luscombe (Creator); Emma Webster (Creator); Clare Coleman (Creator); Kerrin Palazzi (Creator); Joshua Dizon (Creator); Brett Chambers (Creator)

Created: 2024-11-12 to 2024-11-12

Issued: 2024-11-12

Data time period: 2020-03-30 to 2021-01-31

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Spatial Coverage And Location

text: New South Wales, Australia

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