• Int J Pharm Pract · Apr 2014

    Proactive clinical pharmacist interventions in critical care: effect of unit speciality and other factors.

    • Richard S Bourne, Chui Lynn Choo, and Ben J Dorward.
    • Departments of Pharmacy and Critical Care, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals, Northern General Hospital, Sheffield, UK.
    • Int J Pharm Pract. 2014 Apr 1; 22 (2): 146-54.

    BackgroundClinical pharmacists working in critical-care areas have a beneficial effect on a range of medication-related therapies including improving medication safety, patient outcomes and reducing medicines' expenditure. However, there remains a lack of data on specific factors that affect the reason for and type of interventions made by clinical pharmacists, such as unit speciality.ObjectiveTo compare the type of proactive medicines-related interventions made by clinical pharmacists on different critical-care units within the same institution.MethodsA retrospective evaluation of proactive clinical pharmacist recommendations, made in three separate critical-care areas. Intervention data were analysed over 18 months (general units) and 2 weeks for the cardiac and neurological units. Assessment of potential patient harm related to the medication interventions were made in the neurological and cardiac units.Key FindingsOverall, 5623, 211 and 156 proactive recommendations were made; on average 2.2, 3.8 and 4.6 per patient from the general, neurological and cardiac units respectively. The recommendations acceptance rate by medical staff was approximately 90% for each unit. The median potential severity of patient harm averted by the interventions were 3.6 (3; 4.2) and 4 (3.2; 4.4) for the neurological and cardiac units (P = 0.059). The reasons for, types and drug classification of the medication recommendations demonstrated some significant differences between the units.ConclusionsClinical pharmacists with critical-care training make important medication recommendations across general and specialist critical-care units. The patient case mix and admitting speciality have some bearing on the types of medication interventions made. Moreover, severity of patient illness, scope of regular/routine specialist pharmacist service and support systems provided also probably affect the reason for these interventions.© 2013 Royal Pharmaceutical Society.

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