初级保健中药物使用的质量和安全:对一套新的明确药物评估标准的共识验证和改进主题的优先顺序。

Tobias Dreischulte, Aileen M Grant, Colin McCowan, John J McAnaw, Bruce Guthrie
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引用次数: 62

摘要

背景:解决初级保健中可预防的药物相关发病率问题是国际卫生保健系统面临的挑战。英国和国际上越来越多地实施临床信息系统,为系统地识别有PDRM风险的患者进行靶向药物审查提供了新的机会。本研究的目的是:(1)制定一套明确的药物评估标准,从电子医疗记录中识别药物使用次优或高风险的患者;(2)识别英国初级保健临床医生认为是质量和安全改进计划优先考虑的药物使用主题。方法:对于目标(1),基于兰德/加州大学洛杉矶分校适当性方法(RAM)进行了两轮共识过程,从文献中确定候选标准,并由10名专家组成的小组对“适当性”和“必要性”进行评分。根据每个级别接受的候选人产生了一套最终标准。对于目标(2),将主题相关的最终标准分组为“主题”,由26名英国初级保健临床医生组成的小组在两轮Delphi练习中确定了质量改进的优先事项。结果:(1)RAM过程产生了一套最终的176项药物评估标准,这些标准分为“质量”和“安全”两个领域,每一项都被归类为针对“适当/必要”(质量)或“不适当/必要避免”(安全)药物使用。52项最终的“质量”评估标准针对的是适应症未得到满足、药物治疗选择不理想或强度不足的患者。共有124项“安全性”评估标准针对对风险缓解剂的需求未得到满足、高风险药物选择、过量剂量或持续时间、监测或给药说明不一致的患者。(2) 英国德尔福小组确定,在47个评分主题中,有11个(23%)主题是初级保健质量改进举措的“高度优先事项”。结论:制定的标准集补充了现有的药物评估工具,因为它不仅限于老年人,可以在电子数据集中实施,并侧重于初级保健中常见和/或严重PDRM涉及的药物组和条件。已确定的质量和安全改进优先事项可以指导选择解决初级保健PDRM问题的举措目标。
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Quality and safety of medication use in primary care: consensus validation of a new set of explicit medication assessment criteria and prioritisation of topics for improvement.

Background: Addressing the problem of preventable drug related morbidity (PDRM) in primary care is a challenge for health care systems internationally. The increasing implementation of clinical information systems in the UK and internationally provide new opportunities to systematically identify patients at risk of PDRM for targeted medication review. The objectives of this study were (1) to develop a set of explicit medication assessment criteria to identify patients with sub-optimally effective or high-risk medication use from electronic medical records and (2) to identify medication use topics that are perceived by UK primary care clinicians to be priorities for quality and safety improvement initiatives.

Methods: For objective (1), a 2-round consensus process based on the RAND/UCLA Appropriateness Method (RAM) was conducted, in which candidate criteria were identified from the literature and scored by a panel of 10 experts for 'appropriateness' and 'necessity'. A set of final criteria was generated from candidates accepted at each level. For objective (2), thematically related final criteria were clustered into 'topics', from which a panel of 26 UK primary care clinicians identified priorities for quality improvement in a 2-round Delphi exercise.

Results: (1) The RAM process yielded a final set of 176 medication assessment criteria organised under the domains 'quality' and 'safety', each classified as targeting 'appropriate/necessary to do' (quality) or 'inappropriate/necessary to avoid' (safety) medication use. Fifty-two final 'quality' assessment criteria target patients with unmet indications, sub-optimal selection or intensity of beneficial drug treatments. A total of 124 'safety' assessment criteria target patients with unmet needs for risk-mitigating agents, high-risk drug selection, excessive dose or duration, inconsistent monitoring or dosing instructions. (2) The UK Delphi panel identified 11 (23%) of 47 scored topics as 'high priority' for quality improvement initiatives in primary care.

Conclusions: The developed criteria set complements existing medication assessment instruments in that it is not limited to the elderly, can be implemented in electronic data sets and focuses on drug groups and conditions implicated in common and/or severe PDRM in primary care. Identified priorities for quality and safety improvement can guide the selection of targets for initiatives to address the PDRM problem in primary care.

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