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Multicenter Study Controlled Clinical Trial
Including pharmacists on consultant-led ward rounds: a prospective non-randomised controlled trial.
- Gavin Miller, Bryony Dean Franklin, and Ann Jacklin.
- Pharmacy Department, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London. gavin.miller@imperial.nhs.uk
- Clin Med. 2011 Aug 1; 11 (4): 312316312-6.
AbstractThis study aimed to compare interventions made by pharmacists attending consultant-led ward rounds in addition to providing a ward pharmacy service, with those made by pharmacists providing a word pharmacy service alone. A prospective non-randomised controlled study on five inpatient medical wards was carried out at two teaching hospitals. A mean of 1.73 physician-accepted interventions were made per patient for the study group, compared to 0.89 for the control (Mann Whitney U, p < 0.001) with no difference between groups in the nature or clinical importance of the interventions. One physician-accepted intervention was made every eight minutes during the consultant-led ward rounds, compared to one every 63 minutes during a ward pharmacist visit. Pharmacists attending consultant-led ward rounds in addition to undertaking a ward pharmacist visit make significantly more interventions per patient than those made by pharmacists undertaking a ward pharmacist visit alone, rectifying prescribing errors and optimising treatment.
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