Linking Patients’ Goals and Priorities to Recommendations for Medication Changes in a Polypharmacy-Focused Structured Clinical Pathway

Author:

Mangin Dee1ORCID,Lamarche Larkin1,Freeman Karla1,Ali Abbas1,Clark Rebecca1,Shah Nikki1,Awan Amen1,Langevin Jessica1,Parascandalo Jenna1,Dore Brown Naomi1,Jurcic-Vrataric Jane1,Colwill Kiska1,Dragos Steven1,Borhan Sayem1,Risdon Cathy1,Siu Henry1,Farrell Barbara2,Trimble Johanna3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Family Medicine, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

2. Department of Family Medicine, Bruyère Research Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

3. Patient Voices Network, BC Patient Safety and Quality Council, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

Polypharmacy is associated with poorer health outcomes in older adults. It is challenging to minimize the harmful effects of medications while maximizing benefits of single-disease-focused recommendations. Integrating patient input can balance these factors. The objectives are to describe the goals, priorities, and preferences of participants asked about these in a structured process to polypharmacy, and to describe the extent that decision-making within the process mapped onto these, signaling a patient-centered approach. This is a single-group quasi-experimental study, nested within a feasibility randomized controlled trial. Patient goals and priorities were mapped to medication recommendations made during the intervention. Overall, there were 33 participants who reported 55 functional goals and 66 symptom priorities, and 16 participants reported unwanted medications. Overall, 154 recommendations for medication alterations occurred. Of those, 68 (44%) recommendations mapped to the individual's goals and priorities, whereas the rest were based on clinical judgment where no priorities were expressed. Our results signal this process supports a patient-centered approach: allowing conversations around goals and priorities in a structured process to polypharmacy should be integrated into subsequent medication decisions.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy,Health (social science),Leadership and Management

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