• Journal of critical care · Feb 2013

    Medication issues experienced by patients and carers after discharge from the intensive care unit.

    • Heleen Eijsbroek, David C J Howell, Felicity Smith, and Rob Shulman.
    • Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Utrecht, 3508 TB Utrecht, The Netherlands.
    • J Crit Care. 2013 Feb 1; 28 (1): 46-50.

    PurposeMedication-related problems (MRPs) frequently occur at the interfaces of care settings. We examined this further because little has been published about MRPs experienced by patients/carers after discharge from the intensive care unit (ICU).Methods And MaterialsMedication history data were collected before, during, and after ICU admission and by face-to-face semistructured interviews with 21 patients and 13 carers attending the ICU Follow-up Clinic (FC) of our 35-bed adult ICU.ResultsA total of 122 drugs were prescribed regularly before ICU admission, 168 on ICU discharge, 132 at hospital discharge, and 128 at the FC. Medication-related problems were identified with hypnotics/anxiolytics, antidepressants, proton pump inhibitors, and analgesics. Good follow-up was observed in all 4 cases where the antidysrhythmic agent amiodarone was initiated on ICU. Patients/carers described 20 cases of difficulty in obtaining appropriate and timely supplies and 19 of insufficient information.ConclusionsThese results show that our incidence of MRPs after ICU discharge was encouragingly infrequent, in which we attribute it to targeted medicine reconciliation and the availability of our FC. However, MRPs were perceived to stem from inadequate communication at the interfaces of care and the lack of opportunity for patients/carers to obtain relevant information. We recommend that FC should focus on MRPs during their consultation and that further research in this area should be performed to examine our observations further.Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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