Publications by authors named "Anne E Olesen"

Article Synopsis
  • Despite ongoing efforts, medication-related harm in nursing homes remains a significant global issue, particularly due to frail, older residents facing multiple chronic diseases and polypharmacy.
  • The study aims to create an intervention to enhance medication safety using a collaborative approach that incorporates patient safety culture and experiences from various stakeholders.
  • Key findings highlight three main themes influencing medication safety: the presence of closed systems and functional gaps, misinterpretation of resources and their potential, and the importance of community engagement in medication safety practices.
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Background: A lack of instruments to assess patient safety climate within primary care exists. The objectives of this study were as follows: 1) To adapt the Danish hospital version of the Safety Attitudes Questionnaire (SAQ-DK) for use in primary care; 2) Test the internal consistency and the construct validity of this version; 3) Present benchmark data; and 4) Analyze variance.

Methods: The SAQ-DK was adapted for use in Danish primary care settings (SAQ-DK-PRIM) and distributed to healthcare staff members from nursing homes (N = 11), homecare units (N = 4) and healthcare units (N = 2), within the municipality of Aarhus, Central Denmark Region, Denmark.

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Background: Potentially inappropriate medication remains a significant concern in general practices, particularly in the context of overactive bladder (OAB) treatment for individuals aged 65 years and older. This study focuses on the exploration of alternative options for treating OAB and the deprescribing of anticholinergic drugs commonly used in OAB. The research aims to comprehensively evaluate the efficiency of deprescribing through a mixed methods approach, combining quantitative assessment and qualitative exploration of perceptions, experiences, and potential barriers among patients and health care personnel.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the use of medication pick-up lockers in the North Denmark Region, aimed at reducing the burden on hospitals by enabling outpatients to collect cost-free medicines conveniently.
  • Data from March to October 2023 reveals that around 30,000 packages were delivered to these lockers, with about 1.7% returned as unused, focusing on common medications like methotrexate, adalimumab, and omalizumab.
  • The research highlights the need to address potential medication waste, particularly concerning the small percentage of delivered medicines that go uncollected or are returned, indicating trends in patient medication management.
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Background: Person-centred medicine is recommended in the care of older patients. Yet, involvement of care home residents and relatives in medication processes remains limited in routine care. Therefore, we aimed to develop a complex intervention focusing on resident and relative involvement and interprofessional communication to support person-centred medicine in the care home setting.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study looked at how patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) got treated with special medications called biologics at different types of hospitals.
  • It compared patients from Academic Hospitals and Non-Academic Hospitals in North Denmark for the years 2016 to 2018.
  • The results showed that both groups had similar times for getting treated, but more patients with a type of IBD called luminal Crohn's disease were treated at the Academic Hospitals.
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  • Osteoarthritis (OA) pain varies significantly between individuals, and factors such as psychological well-being, sensory testing, and health-related quality of life play crucial roles in determining pain levels and treatment outcomes.
  • This study explored how baseline pain intensity in OA patients relates to their pain after taking a combination of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and paracetamol for three weeks, using the KOOS pain score to measure changes.
  • Findings revealed that pain catastrophizing scores (PCS) were a significant predictor of both baseline and follow-up pain levels, suggesting that incorporating psychological elements like PCS and pressure pain thresholds (TSP) in treatment plans could be beneficial for managing OA pain.
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Aim: The objective of this registry study is to assess the utilization of pharmacogenomic (PGx) drugs among patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD).

Methods: This study was a retrospective study of patients affiliated with the Department of Nephrology, Aalborg University Hospital, Denmark in 2021. Patients diagnosed with CKD were divided into CKD without dialysis and CKD with dialysis.

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Patient safety research has focused mostly on the hospital and acute care setting whereas assessments of patient safety climate in primary health care settings are warranted. Valid questionnaires as e.g.

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Introduction: Drug absorption is often altered and typically diminished in patients with short bowel syndrome (SBS). It is important to understand the patient's gastrointestinal anatomy, the absorptive capacity of the remaining bowel, and the physicochemical and pharmacokinetic properties of the drug to optimize oral pharmacotherapy.

Areas Covered: The primary focus was to provide an updated understanding of the absorption of various drugs in patients with short bowel syndrome.

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Medication reviews focusing on deprescribing can reduce potentially inappropriate medication; however, evidence regarding effects on health-related outcomes is sparse. In a real-life quality improvement project using a newly developed chronic care model, we investigated how a general practitioner-led medication review intervention focusing on deprescribing affected health-related outcomes. We performed a before-after intervention study including care home residents and community-dwelling patients affiliated with a large Danish general practice.

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Purpose: The majority of bleeding diagnoses in the Danish National Patient Registry have not been validated despite extensive use in epidemiological research. Therefore, we examined the positive predictive value (PPV) of non-traumatic bleeding diagnoses in the Danish National Patient Registry.

Study Design: Population-based validation study.

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Background: Medication safety is increasingly challenging patient safety in growing aging populations. Developing positive patient safety cultures is acknowledged as a primary goal to improve patient safety, but evidence on the interventions to do so is inconclusive. Nursing home residents are often cognitively and physically impaired and are therefore highly reliant on frontline health care providers.

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Introduction: Paracetamol poisoning is a frequent cause of hospitalization in Denmark. On 30 September 2013, the Danish authorities restricted packages available without a prescription in pharmacy outlets to contain a maximum of 10 g of paracetamol. We aimed to investigate the effects of this regulation.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study aimed to create an Evidence and Gap Map (EGM) to identify intervention categories and outcomes in chronic musculoskeletal (MSK) pain research since there are currently none in that field.
  • - Researchers analyzed 4,299 systematic reviews from various databases, ultimately including 457, with most rated as low-quality; physical interventions like exercise therapy were most common, while interdisciplinary approaches were rare.
  • - The findings highlighted a significant lack of high-quality research in chronic MSK pain and emphasized the necessity for future studies to consider a more comprehensive biopsychosocial approach.
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Introduction: Biologic therapy is widely used for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and may decrease surgery rates. However, it remains uncertain if there is unwarranted geographic variation in access to biologic therapy. The aim of the study was to explore if all patients had equal access to biologic therapy in the North Denmark Region.

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Introduction: The high prevalence of chronic medical conditions among older adults leads to an increased use of prescription medications and a heightened risk of polypharmacy, raising the risk of falls and fractures. Psychotropic medications influence balance, and therefore our aim was to describe the use of psychotropic medications and the association with polypharmacy in elderly patients with a hip fracture.

Methods: A retrospective study of 200 patients aged 65 years or more admitted consecutively with a hip fracture.

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Objectives: Patient and stakeholder engagements in research have increasingly gained attention in healthcare and healthcare-related research. A common and rigorous approach to establish research priorities based on input from people and stakeholders is the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnership (JLA-PSP). The aim of this study was to establish research priorities for chronic musculoskeletal (MSK) pain by engaging with people living with chronic MSK pain, relatives to people living with chronic MSK pain, healthcare professionals (HCP), and researchers working with chronic MSK pain.

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Background: Duloxetine is indicated in the management of pain in osteoarthritis. Evidence suggests that duloxetine modulates central pain mechanisms and cognitive factors, and these factors are assumed contributing to the analgesic effect. This proof-of-mechanism, randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover, double-blinded trial evaluated the effect of duloxetine on quantitative sensory testing (QST), cognitive factors and clinical pain in patients with osteoarthritis and to predict the analgesic effect.

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Background: The global burden of osteoarthritis (OA) is steadily increasing due to demographic and lifestyle changes. The nervous system can undergo peripheral and central neuroplastic changes (sensitization) in patients with OA impacting the options to manage the pain adequately. As a result of sensitization, patients with OA show lower pressure pain thresholds (PPTs), facilitated temporal summation of pain (TSP), and impaired conditioned pain modulation (CPM).

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Article Synopsis
  • A study was done at Aalborg University Hospital on drug poisonings, looking at 261 cases over one year.
  • Most poisonings were from prescribed or over-the-counter medications, with paracetamol being the most common.
  • The study found that while treatment was mostly successful, better blood tests could help catch more cases of unknown drug involvement.
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Objectives: Musculoskeletal pain is common among children and adolescents. Despite the lack of evidence regarding harms and benefits, musculoskeletal pain is often managed with pain medication. The aim of this systematic review is to assess the prevalence of pain medication use for musculoskeletal pain among children and adolescents and the factors and side effects associated with use.

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Moderate to severe pain is often treated with opioids, but central mechanisms underlying opioid analgesia are poorly understood. Findings thus far have been contradictory and none could infer opioid specific effects. This placebo-controlled, randomized, 2-way cross-over, double-blinded study aimed to explore opioid specific effects on central processing of external stimuli.

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The physiological changes following Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery may impact drug release from mechanistically different controlled-release tablets, making generic substitution inappropriate. This study aimed to characterise the pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic relationships of oxycodone from a lipid-based and water-swellable controlled-release tablet in RYGB patients. Twenty RYGB patients received 10-mg oral solution oxycodone or 20-mg controlled-release (water-swellable or lipid-based) oxycodone in a three-way, randomised, semiblinded and cross-over study.

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