Critical Care Pharmacy Services in United States Hospitals

Author:

MacLaren Robert1,Devlin John W2,Martin Steven J3,Dasta Joseph F4,Rudis Maria I5,Bond CA6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Pharmacy, School of Pharmacy, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO

2. School of Pharmacy, Northeastern University, Boston, MA

3. The Infectious Diseases Research Laboratory, College of Pharmacy, University of Toledo, Toledo, OH

4. College of Pharmacy, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH

5. Emergency Medicine/Critical Care Pharmacy Residency Program, School of Pharmacy and Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA

6. Department of Pharmacy Practice, School of Pharmacy, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, Amarillo, TX

Abstract

Background: Critical care pharmacy activities have been described as fundamental, desirable, and optimal, but actual services provided have not been evaluated. Objective: To characterize the type and level of pharmacy services provided to intensive care units (ICUs). Methods: A 38 question survey was sent in 2 consecutive mailings to all US institutions (N = 3238) with an ICU. Questions were categorized according to clinical, educational, administrative, and scholarly activities, with levels of services stratified as fundamental, desirable, or optimal. Results: Completed surveys were received from 382 (11.8%) institutions encompassing 1034 ICUs. Direct clinical pharmacy activities were provided at 62.2% of ICUs. The pharmacists in those programs attended rounds 4.4 ± 1.5 days/wk, mean ± SD, and had a workweek that consisted of patient care (43% of hours worked), drug distribution (26.2%), administration (12.6%), education (10.9%), and scholarly activities (7.3%). Fundamental clinical activities performed during at least 75% of patient ICU days were providing drug information, drug therapy evaluation, drug therapy intervention, and pharmacokinetic monitoring. Conducting inservices (92.8%), a fundamental service, was the only educational activity frequently provided. Most respondents were involved with at least one multidisciplinary committee, and 45.5% conducted scholarly activities. Desirable or optimal activities were not frequently provided across all service categories. Conclusions: Clinical pharmacists are directly involved as caregivers in nearly two-thirds of ICUs in the US. Although they provide a range of clinical and administrative services, involvement in educational and scholarly activities is variable. The level of services provided is consistent with the criteria deemed fundamental for improving patient care. Higher-order services are far less likely to be provided.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical)

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