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Interventions to optimize medication use in nursing homes: a narrative review

Authors :
Anne Spinewine
Perrine Evrard
Carmel Hughes
UCL - SSS/LDRI - Louvain Drug Research Institute
UCL - (MGD) Département de pharmacie
Source :
European Geriatric Medicine, European geriatric medicine, Vol. 12, no. 3, p. 551-567 (2021), Spinewine, A, Evrard, P & Hughes, C 2021, ' Interventions to optimize medication use in nursing homes: a narrative review ', European Geriatric Medicine, vol. 12, pp. 551-567 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s41999-021-00477-5
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Key summary points Aim This review aimed to identify, describe and discuss different interventions targeting medication use optimization in nursing homes and to identify research gaps. Finding Prescription of the whole medication regimen or of specific medication classes was the most studied aspect. Medication review and multidisciplinary approaches appeared to be effective strategies in reducing appropriate use, but further large-scale randomized trials are needed. Messages Efforts to optimize medication use among nursing home residents are still needed and should focus on less evaluated intervention components, specific medication classes and medication use aspects not related to prescribing.<br />Purpose Polypharmacy, medication errors and adverse drug events are frequent among nursing home residents. Errors can occur at any step of the medication use process. We aimed to review interventions aiming at optimization of any step of medication use in nursing homes. Methods We narratively reviewed quantitative as well as qualitative studies, observational and experimental studies that described interventions, their effects as well as barriers and enablers to implementation. We prioritized recent studies with relevant findings for the European setting. Results Many interventions led to improvements in medication use. However, because of outcome heterogeneity, comparison between interventions was difficult. Prescribing was the most studied aspect of medication use. At the micro-level, medication review, multidisciplinary work, and more recently, patient-centered care components dominated. At the macro-level, guidelines and legislation, mainly for specific medication classes (e.g., antipsychotics) were employed. Utilization of technology also helped improve medication administration. Several barriers and enablers were reported, at individual, organizational, and system levels. Conclusion Overall, existing interventions are effective in optimizing medication use. However there is a need for further European well-designed and large-scale evaluations of under-researched intervention components (e.g., health information technology, patient-centered approaches), specific medication classes (e.g., antithrombotic agents), and interventions targeting medication use aspects other than prescribing (e.g., monitoring). Further development and uptake of core outcome sets is required. Finally, qualitative studies on barriers and enablers for intervention implementation would enable theory-driven intervention design.

Details

ISSN :
18787657
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Geriatric Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bf95aeff785e70d5d86435a045edbca1