AI Article Synopsis

  • - A study examined the prescription patterns of medications for patients with nasally placed feeding tubes (NPFT) and found that 92% were on polypharmacy (multiple medications) upon admission, decreasing slightly to 84.7% at discharge.
  • - High-alert medications (those that pose a significant risk if used inappropriately) made up over 17% of all prescriptions, with no significant change in their usage between admission and discharge.
  • - The study highlights the need for coordinated care strategies to manage the medication risks associated with NPFT patients, particularly given their complex health conditions.

Article Abstract

Background: Polypharmacy and the use of high-alert medications in patients with nasally placed feeding tube (NPFT) increase the risks of drug related problems.

Objective: Characterize drugs prescribed to patients with NPFT and compare the rates of polypharmacy and high-alert medication use at admission and hospital discharge.

Design And Setting: Multicenter cross-sectional study with 327 participants.

Methods: Data of patients with NPFT were obtained from the medical records and recorded in an electronic data collection tool. Mean number of drugs, polypharmacy and number of high-alert medications prescribed on admission and at discharge were compared using Wilcoxon or McNemar's tests. Generalized Estimating Equations analyzed the relationship between polypharmacy and high-alert medications according to age and time point. Primary reason for hospital admission, level of consciousness, severity of comorbid diseases and patient care complexity were also assessed.

Results: Most patients were male, older people, hospitalized for circulatory system diseases and had at least one comorbidity. On admission, a significant number of patients were alert (59.9%), at high risk for death (43.1%) and high dependent on nursing care (35.4%). Additionally, 92% patients were on polypharmacy on admission, versus 84.7% at hospital discharge ( = 0,0011). The occurrence of polypharmacy was independent of age ( = 0.2377). >17% of all drugs prescribed were high-alert medications, with no statistically significant difference between admission and discharge (p = 0,3957). There was no statistical evidence that the use of high-alert medications increases with age ( = 0,5426).

Conclusions: These results support the planning of multidisciplinary qualified actions for patients using NPFT.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11282982PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rcsop.2024.100474DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

high-alert medications
24
polypharmacy high-alert
16
patients npft
12
patients
8
medications patients
8
patients nasally
8
nasally feeding
8
feeding tube
8
admission hospital
8
hospital discharge
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!