Background: Medication reconciliation is a major part of clinical care transitions that can promote patient safety and satisfaction. The main administrators of this process are pharmacy practitioners. Currently, many medical centers all over the world implement the procedures of medication reconciliation with varying styles and inconsistent success. Some other centers are going to build protocols in the near future. By now, there is no consensus for an optimal method of running medication reconciliation and each center has its own approach. This fact can cause a huge amount of resource wastages. In this narrative review, we searched scientific literature in this field in order to extract, underline and formalize the specific features which help a medical center to reach an optimized medication reconciliation plan.
Methods: We explored the PubMed database with keywords of "medication reconciliation" and "pharmacy service" to obtain a relevant reference pool for our topic. Then we checked the affiliations of authors to be assured of the international diversity of our perspective.
Results: Our search method yielded 184 journal articles from different continents. The frequency of published articles from America was higher and then, Europe, Australia, Asia and Africa were placed, respectively.
Conclusion: According to the results, inclusion of factors like establishing phases for implementation, proper education, developing academic coordination, providing suitable facilities, specialization of the services, periodical evaluations and promoting pharmacy practice in the development of medication reconciliation will potentially lead to an optimized plan.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1574884715666200210123255 | DOI Listing |
Int J Clin Pharm
January 2025
Department of Clinical Pharmacology and Pharmacy, Amsterdam University Medical Centers, Location VUMC, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Background: Deprescribing inappropriate cardiovascular and antidiabetic medication has been shown to be feasible and safe. Healthcare providers often perceive the deprescribing of cardiovascular and antidiabetic medication as a challenge and therefore it is still not widely implemented in daily practice.
Aim: The aim was to assess whether training focused on conducting a deprescribing-oriented clinical medication review (CMR) results in a reduction of the inappropriate use of cardiovascular and antidiabetic medicines.
J Health Popul Nutr
January 2025
Al Wafa Dental Center, Unayzah, Al Qassim, Saudi Arabia.
Background: Medication reconciliation has been acknowledged as a key intervention against medication errors. More than half of the medication errors that happen during care transitions are caused by unjustified medication discrepancies and up to one-third of these mistakes may be harmful. The study aimed to evaluate the knowledge, attitude and practices (KAP) of health care providers in on medication reconciliation process, pre and post educational intervention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Equity Health
January 2025
School of Pharmacy, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.
Introduction: Community health workers (CHWs) help bridge the cultural gap between health services and the communities they serve. CHWs work with physicians, nurses and social workers, but little is known about their collaboration with pharmacists. This scoping review aims to describe the interprofessional collaboration between CHWs and pharmacists, the types of interventions they deliver and CHWs' and pharmacists' specific roles within these interventions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Pharm Pract
January 2025
Pharmacy Department, Gold Coast Health, Southport, Queensland 4215, Australia.
Objectives: This study explored South-East Queensland Australian pharmacists' perspectives on preparing discharge medicine lists, specifically involvement of pharmacy assistants, use of electronic medication management software, and expanding pharmacists' scope during discharge.
Methods: Electronic survey distributed to pharmacists during December 2021 and data collected over 3 weeks.
Key Findings: Pharmacists supported increased involvement of pharmacy assistants (with structured collaborative training), pharmacist-led medication reconciliation, and producing the discharge medicine list directly from the electronic record.
Geriatr Psychol Neuropsychiatr Vieil
December 2024
Research Department, Biostatistics, Lille Catholic Hospitals, Lille, France.
The personalized prescription plan (PPP) summarizes the changes made to a patient's prescription on discharge from hospital. The aim of the present study was to evaluate 30-day medication continuity in older patients whose PPP was implemented at hospital discharge. Prospective randomized controlled trial including people aged at least 75 discharged from an acute geriatric unit.
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