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Contribution of Hospital Pharmacy Residents to Resolution of Drug Therapy Problems for Patients: RES-DTP Study Manish Khullar Richard Slavik Sean Gorman Nicole Bruchet Sarah Murray Brett Hamilton Dawn Dalen
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Background Clinical pharmacists resolving drug therapy problems (DTPs) for patients improve clinical and health economic outcomes A Canadian National Working Group has recommended 8 clinical pharmacy key performance indicators (cpKPI) to advance pharmacy practice and improve patient care Makowsky MK, et al. Med Care 2009;47:642-650. Gillespie U, et al. Arch Intern Med 2009;169:894-900.
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Background 1.Performing admission medication reconciliation 2.Participating in inter-professional patient care rounds 3.Initiating a pharmaceutical care plan 4.Resolving drug therapy problems (DTPs) 5.Providing in-person disease and medication education 6.Providing discharge medication education/counseling 7.Performing discharge medication reconciliation 8.Providing bundled, proactive patient care Fernandes O, et al. Pharmacotherapy 2013; 33(10):e208.
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Background Total DTP Any DTP resolved by a pharmacist DSEM-DTP DTP resolved for a condition covered in priority disease state education modules (DSEMs) DSEM-KPI A key pharmacist intervention proven to reduce morbidity, mortality, or health resource utilization for that disease
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Background Pharmacist-resolved DTP is a key clinical performance indicator for IH Pharmacy OutcomeNumber (%) Total DTP29,909 DSEM-DTP12,017 (40%) DSEM-KPI7,448 (25%) Interior Health DTP Tracker Data (Jan 1 – Dec 31, 2013)
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Rationale Resolving impactful DTPs for priority patients is a major professional development goal for the IH Pharmacy Practice Residency Program Limited data suggest that U.S. entry to practice PharmD students and residents may contribute to clinical care during experiential rotations Mersfelder TL, et al. Pharmacotherapy 2012; 46:541-548. Taylor CT, et al. Ann Pharmacother 2000; 34:843-846.
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Rationale There are no data on the contribution of Canadian pharmacy practice residents to resolved DTPs during experiential rotations A recently completed IH study identified discordance on the perception of IH resident contributions to DTP resolution
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Objectives To describe the contribution of IH pharmacy practice residents to clinical pharmacy care using resident-resolved DTPs To describe resident satisfaction with tracking their resolved DTPs
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Methods Design Prospective, observational, one group study Setting Kelowna General Hospital (KGH), Royal Inland Hospital (RIH), Penticton Regional Hospital (PRH), East Kootenay Regional Hospital (EKH) and Kootenay Lake Hospital from Sept 2, 2013 to Jun 13, 2014
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Methods Inclusion Criteria DTP Tracker data collated from 4 IH pharmacy practice residents after completion of the first 4-week patient care rotation (i.e. Internal Medicine) Exclusion Criteria DTP Tracker data that is uninterpretable or incomplete
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Methods Primary Outcome Number of resident-resolved DTPs Secondary Outcomes Number of resident-resolved DSEM-DTPs Number of resident-resolved DSEM-KPIs Progression of resident-resolved DTPs, DSEM-DTPs, and DSEM-KPIs over time Survey feedback on resident satisfaction with training, usability, efficiency, and time of DTP tracking
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Results OutcomeNumber (%) 1° Total DTP581 2° DSEM-DTP298 (51%) 2° DSEM-KPI241 (42%) *Interim analysis of 12 clinical rotations (50%) for 4 residents: Internal Medicine, community medicine, rural medicine (2), ambulatory care (2), nephrology (2), cardiology (3), critical care
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Results #1 Monthly Counts Rotation #2#3 #4#5 #6
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Results Survey Domains Satisfaction Ratings TrainingUsabilityEfficiencyTime DTP Tracker Satisfaction Survey
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Results Survey Domains Satisfaction Ratings TrainingUsabilityEfficiencyTime DTP Tracker Satisfaction Survey
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Results % Satisfied DTP Tracker Satisfaction Survey
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Conclusions IH Pharmacy practice residents are resolving DTPs, DSEM-DTPs, and DSEM-KPIs Resident interventions have increased over time throughout the residency year Resident interventions would be expected to improve clinical and health economic outcomes for patients DTP tracking by residents was well-accepted based on training, usability, efficiency, and time requirements
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Conclusions Future research should focus on describing the contribution of IH hospital pharmacists and residents to clinical pharmacy care using the 8 recommended clinical pharmacy key performance indicators (cpKPI) This analysis should provide a more “balanced” dashboard of clinical quality indicators
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