Clinical Outcomes of Student Pharmacist–Driven Medication Histories at an Academic Medical Center

Author:

Gortney Justine S.1,Moser Lynette R.1,Patel Priyasha2,Raub Joshua N.3

Affiliation:

1. Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, USA

2. Olympia LLC, Livonia, MI, USA

3. Detroit Receiving Hospital, Detroit Medical Center, Detroit, MI, USA

Abstract

Background: Many studies have shown the positive impact that student pharmacists have on patients’ health; however, no studies have been published evaluating student pharmacists’ impact on direct patient outcomes (ie, readmission, emergency department [ED] visits, length of stay) related to the medication history process. Objective: To evaluate the impact of student pharmacist–obtained medication histories on identification of medication discrepancies and clinical outcomes. Methods: Student pharmacists obtained medication histories and then compared the history to that obtained by other health-care providers. Students documented discrepancies and interventions were completed. Control patients were identified and discharge medication list and 30-day readmissions were compared. Results: Seventeen students conducted 215 patient interviews, and 1848 modifications were made to documented home medications in the electronic medical record. Compared to controls (n = 148 student pharmacist, 149 controls), a nonsignificant improvement was found in discharge medication list completeness scores in patients seen by student pharmacists (3.94 vs 3.63; P = .06); but no difference was found in accuracy scores (0.92 vs 0.93; P = .41). Fewer ED visits at 30 days were found in the student pharmacist group (8 vs 18; P = .045), with no difference in readmissions. Conclusions: Student pharmacist–obtained medication histories improved the information available for identifying drug-related problems for inpatients, completeness of the discharge medication list, and ED visits within 30 days.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical)

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