MRCI components of dosing frequency and prescribed medications outside of the cohort-defining disease medications contributed the most to the patient-level scores. Thus, chronic disease management programs may want to consider all medications that patients are taking and examine ways to reduce complexity, such as reducing multiple dosing frequencies when possible. MRCI scores differentiated high and low patient-level complexity measures, representing possible utility as a prospective tool to identify target patients for intervention. Future work includes simplifying the MRCI and enhancing the scores with medication risk factors, as well as explicitly linking to adherence and health services.
The purpose of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy (ACCP) is to advance human health by extending the frontiers of clinical pharmacy. Consistent with this mission and its core values, ACCP is committed to ensuring that clinical pharmacists possess the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviors necessary to deliver comprehensive medication management (CMM) in team-based, direct patient care environments. These components form the basis for the core competencies of a clinical pharmacist and reflect the competencies of other direct patient care providers. This paper is an update to a previous ACCP document and includes the expectation that clinical pharmacists be competent in six essential domains: direct patient care, pharmacotherapy knowledge, systems-based care and population health, communication, professionalism, and continuing professional development. Although these domains align with the competencies of physician providers, they are specifically designed to better reflect the clinical pharmacy expertise required to provide CMM in patient-centered, team-based settings. Clinical pharmacists must be prepared to complete the education and training needed to achieve these competencies and must commit to ongoing efforts to maintain competence through ongoing professional development. Collaboration among stakeholders will be needed to ensure that these competencies guide clinical pharmacists' professional development and evaluation by educational institutions, postgraduate training programs, professional societies, and employers.
Robust studies evaluating the safety and efficacy of quetiapine for the treatment of insomnia are lacking. Given its limited efficacy data, its adverse-effect profile, and the availability of agents approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of insomnia, quetiapine's benefit in the treatment of insomnia has not been proven to outweigh potential risks, even in patients with a comorbid labeled indication for quetiapine.
The objectives of this retrospective study were to examine the feasibility and characteristics that define successful implementation of a Clinical Pharmacy Specialist (CPS) telephonic hospital discharge follow-up quality improvement initiative, as well as the impact of this initiative. Adult patients who were discharged from a safety-net hospital between July 1, 2010 and June 30, 2011 and who were part of a patient-centered medical home were included in this quality improvement initiative. CPSs attempted to contact 470 patients; of those, 207 received the intervention and 263 did not. Patients in the contacted group were more likely to attend a hospital discharge follow-up appointment (66.2% vs. 44.5%, P<0.01) and had lower rates of 30-day readmission (22 vs. 52, P<0.01) compared to those who were not contacted. Institutions should consider allocating resources for pharmacist-managed posthospital discharge follow-up services because of the potential for positive clinical and financial impact.
Background
The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has new regulatory authorities intended to enhance drug safety monitoring in the post-marketing period. This has resulted in an increase in communication from the FDA in recent years about the safety of certain drugs. It is important to stay abreast of the current literature on drug risks in order to effectively communicate these risks to patients, other health care providers, and the general public.
Objective
To summarize four new FDA drug safety communications by describing the evidence supporting the risks and the clinical implications for older adults.
Methods
The FDA website was reviewed for new drug safety communications from May 2011 to April 2012 that would be relevant to older adults. Approved labeling for each drug or class was obtained from the manufacturer, and PubMed was searched for primary literature supporting the drug safety concern.
Results
FDA drug safety communications for four drugs were chosen based on the potential clinical importance in older adults. A warning for citalopram was made due to potential problems with QT prolongation in patients taking >40 mg/day. The evidence suggests minor changes in QT interval. Given the flat dose-response curve in treating depression with citalopram, the new 20 mg/day maximum dose in older adults is sensible. Another warning was made for proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) and an increased risk of Clostridium difficile infection. A dose-response relationship has been shown for this drug risk. With C. difficile infections on the rise in older adults, along with other safety risks of PPI therapy, PPIs should only be used in older adults indicated for therapy for the shortest duration possible. In addition, a warning about dabigatran was made. There is strong evidence from a large clinical trial, as well as case reports, of increased bleeding risk in older adults taking dabigatran, especially in those with decreased renal function. This medication should be used with caution in older adults. Finally, several warnings were made regarding statins. Routine periodic monitoring of liver enzymes does not appear to be effective in detecting or preventing serious liver injury from statin use, and thus liver enzymes are no longer recommended to be routinely monitored. Statin-induced cognitive changes are rare and insufficient evidence is currently available to establish causality. Statins appear to moderately increase the risk of developing diabetes (versus placebo), and regular screening for diabetes should be considered, especially for those taking high-dose statins and those with multiple risk factors for diabetes.
Conclusion
FDA drug safety communications incorporate complex methodologies which investigate the risks (and relative benefits) of medication therapy. Clinicians caring for older adults need to be aware of the most current evidence behind these drug risks in order to effectively communicate with and care for their patients.
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