The impact of COVID‐19 on medication reviews in English primary care. An OpenSAFELY‐TPP analysis of 20 million adult electronic health records

Author:

,Wood Christopher1ORCID,Speed Victoria12ORCID,Fisher Louis1ORCID,Curtis Helen J.1ORCID,Schaffer Andrea L.1ORCID,Walker Alex J.1ORCID,Croker Richard1ORCID,Brown Andrew D.1ORCID,Cunningham Christine1ORCID,Hulme William J.1ORCID,Andrews Colm D.1ORCID,Butler‐Cole Ben F. C.1,Evans David1ORCID,Inglesby Peter1ORCID,Dillingham Iain1,Bacon Sebastian C. J.1ORCID,Davy Simon1ORCID,Ward Tom1ORCID,Hickman George1ORCID,Bridges Lucy1ORCID,O'Dwyer Thomas1ORCID,Maude Steven1ORCID,Smith Rebecca M.1,Mehrkar Amir1ORCID,Bates Chris3ORCID,Cockburn Jonathan3ORCID,Parry John3,Hester Frank3,Harper Sam3,Goldacre Ben1ORCID,MacKenna Brian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Bennett Institute for Applied Data Science, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

2. Department of Thrombosis and Haemostasis, King's College Hospital London UK

3. TPP Leeds Horsforth UK

Abstract

AimsThe COVID‐19 pandemic caused significant disruption to routine activity in primary care. Medication reviews are an important primary care activity ensuring safety and appropriateness of prescribing. A disruption could have significant negative implications for patient care. Using routinely collected data, our aim was first to describe codes used to record medication review activity and then to report the impact of COVID‐19 on the rates of medication reviews.MethodsWith the approval of NHS England, we conducted a cohort study of 20 million adult patient records in general practice, in‐situ using the OpenSAFELY platform. For each month, between April 2019 and March 2022, we report the percentage of patients with a medication review coded monthly and in the previous 12 months with breakdowns by regional, clinical and demographic subgroups and those prescribed high‐risk medications.ResultsIn April 2019, 32.3% of patients had a medication review coded in the previous 12 months. During the first COVID‐19 lockdown, monthly activity decreased (−21.1% April 2020), but the 12‐month rate was not substantially impacted (−10.5% March 2021). The rate of structured medication review in the last 12 months reached 2.9% by March 2022, with higher percentages in high‐risk groups (care home residents 34.1%, age 90+ years 13.1%, high‐risk medications 10.2%). The most used medication review code was Medication review done 314530002 (59.5%).ConclusionsThere was a substantial reduction in the monthly rate of medication reviews during the pandemic but rates recovered by the end of the study period. Structured medication reviews were prioritized for high‐risk patients.

Funder

Health Data Research UK

Medical Research Council

Wellcome Trust

UK Research and Innovation

Publisher

Wiley

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