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Erschienen in: International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy 5/2018

01.10.2018 | Short Research Report

Deprescribing admission medication at a UK teaching hospital; a report on quantity and nature of activity

verfasst von: Sion Scott, Allan Clark, Carol Farrow, Helen May, Martyn Patel, Michael James Twigg, David John Wright, Debi Bhattacharya

Erschienen in: International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy | Ausgabe 5/2018

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Abstract

Background Deprescribing medication may be in response to an adverse clinical trigger (reactive) or if future gains are unlikely to outweigh future harms (proactive). A hospital admission may present an opportunity for deprescribing, however current practice is poorly understood. Objective To quantify and describe the nature of deprescribing in a UK teaching hospital. Method Prescribing and discontinuation data for admission medication from a hospital’s electronic prescribing system were extracted over 4 weeks. The rationale for discontinuation of a random sample of 200 was determined using medical records. This informed categorisation of deprescribing activity by clinicians into ‘proactive’ or ‘reactive’. Data were extrapolated to estimate the proportion of admission medications deprescribed and the proportion which were reactive and proactive. Results From 24,552 admission medicines, 977 discontinuations were recorded. Of the 200 discontinuations sampled for review, only 44 (22.0%) were confirmed deprescribing activities; categorised into 7 (15.9%) proactive and 37 (84.1%) reactive. Extrapolation yielded 0.6% (95% CI 0.5–0.7%) of all admission medications deprescribed. Conclusion Limited deprescribing activity, dominated by reactive behaviour was identified, suggesting prescribers require a clinical trigger to prompt deprescribing. There may be scope for increasing proactive deprescribing in hospital, however the extent to which this is feasible is unknown.
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Metadaten
Titel
Deprescribing admission medication at a UK teaching hospital; a report on quantity and nature of activity
verfasst von
Sion Scott
Allan Clark
Carol Farrow
Helen May
Martyn Patel
Michael James Twigg
David John Wright
Debi Bhattacharya
Publikationsdatum
01.10.2018
Verlag
Springer International Publishing
Erschienen in
International Journal of Clinical Pharmacy / Ausgabe 5/2018
Print ISSN: 2210-7703
Elektronische ISSN: 2210-7711
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11096-018-0673-1

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