PROTECTED-UK – Clinical pharmacist interventions in the UK critical care unit: exploration of relationship between intervention, service characteristics and experience level

Author:

Rudall Nicola1,McKenzie Catherine23,Landa June3,Bourne Richard S4ORCID,Bates Ian5,Shulman Rob6

Affiliation:

1. Pharmacy Department, Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle upon Tyne

2. Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Kings College London, London

3. Pharmacy and Critical Care, Guy's & St Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust, St Thomas’ Hospital, London

4. Departments of Pharmacy and Critical Care, Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Northern General Hospital, Sheffield

5. School of Pharmacy, University College London, London

6. Pharmacy and Critical Care, University College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London

Abstract

Abstract Purpose Clinical pharmacist (CP) interventions from the PROTECTED-UK cohort, a multi-site critical care interventions study, were further analysed to assess effects of: time on critical care, number of interventions, CP expertise and days of week, on impact of intervention and ultimately contribution to patient care. Methods Intervention data were collected from 21 adult critical care units over 14 days. Interventions could be error, optimisation or consults, and were blind-coded to ensure consistency, prior to bivariate analysis. Pharmacy service demographics were further collated by investigator survey. Key findings Of the 20 758 prescriptions reviewed, 3375 interventions were made (intervention rate 16.1%). CPs spent 3.5 h per day (mean, ±SD 1.7) on direct patient care, reviewed 10.3 patients per day (±SD 4.2) and required 22.5 min (±SD 9.5) per review. Intervention rate had a moderate inverse correlation with the time the pharmacist spent on critical care (P = 0.05; r = 0.4). Optimisation rate had a strong inverse association with total number of prescriptions reviewed per day (P = 0.001; r = 0.7). A consultant CP had a moderate inverse correlation with number of errors identified (P = 0.008; r = 0.6). No correlation existed between the presence of electronic prescribing in critical care and any intervention rate. Few centres provided weekend services, although the intervention rate was significantly higher on weekends than weekdays. Conclusions A CP is essential for safe and optimised patient medication therapy; an extended and developed pharmacy service is expected to reduce errors. CP services should be adequately staffed to enable adequate time for prescription review and maximal therapy optimisation.

Funder

UKCPA

Biomedical Research Centre at Guys and St.Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust

National Institute for Health Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy,Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacy

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