澳大利亚急性医院患者补充药物的使用:一项探索性的横断面研究。

2区 医学 Q1 Medicine BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine Pub Date : 2019-12-21 DOI:10.1186/s12906-019-2788-x
Freya Waddington, Jenny Lee, Mark Naunton, Greg Kyle, Jackson Thomas, Gabrielle O'Kane
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:在过去十年中,澳大利亚补充药物的使用量显著增加。本研究试图确定在急性医院环境中记录、停止或启动补充和替代药物的程度,并调查哪些卫生专业人员在这一过程中发挥作用。方法:对某三级教学医院住院病人进行横断面调查。检查患者的医疗记录,以确定补充药物(CM)的使用率,并记录在药物图表和出院处方上。对患者进展记录进行审计,以确定哪些卫生专业人员参与了住院期间CM的启动或停止。结果:纳入分析的患者341例,其中44.3%(n = 151)参与者被记录为使用CM。患者平均入院2次(±1.4[Sd];0-9[范围])CM,平均出院1.7次(±1.3[Sd],0-5[范围]。住院患者药物对账表上记录了274个CM,其中复合维生素、镁、鱼油和胆钙化醇的记录频率最高。在患者住院期间,记录了158例患者CM使用的变化。其中107个变化(68%)未在患者进展记录中说明。结论:在这种医院环境下,患者对CM的使用并没有反映出国家估计的使用情况。在CM产品被包括在患者记录中的情况下,它们随后在医院的患者检查后被取消描述。目前尚不清楚哪些卫生专业人员在这一描述过程中发挥了作用。
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Complementary medicine use among Australian patients in an acute hospital setting: an exploratory, cross sectional study.

Background: The use of Complementary Medicines (CMs) has significantly increased in Australia over the last decade. This study attempts to determine the extent to which complementary and alternative medicines are recorded, ceased or initiated in the acute hospital setting and investigate which health professionals have a role in this process.

Methods: A cross-sectional study of inpatients was conducted at a major tertiary teaching hospital. Patient's medical records were examined to determine the rates of complementary medicine (CM) use and recording on medication charts and discharge prescriptions. Patient progress notes were audited to determine which health professionals were involved with the initiation or cessation of CMs during the inpatient stay.

Results: Three hundred and forty-one patients were included for analysis of which 44.3% (n = 151) participants were recorded as utilizing a CM. Patients were admitted on a mean of 2 (±1.4[Sd]; 0-9[range]) CMs and discharged on a mean of 1.7 CMs (±1.3[Sd]; 0-5[range]). 274 individual CMs were recorded on inpatient medication reconciliation forms with multivitamins, magnesium, fish oil and cholecalciferol recorded the most frequently. One hundred and fifty-eight changes to patient CM usage were recorded during the patient hospitalisation. One hundred and seven of these changes (68%) were not accounted for in the patient progress notes.

Conclusion: Patients use of CM in this hospital setting do not reflect the national estimated usage. On the occasions that CM products are included in patient records, they are subsequently deprescribed following patient examination in hospital. It is currently unclear which health professionals have a role in this deprescribing process.

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来源期刊
BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine
BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine INTEGRATIVE & COMPLEMENTARY MEDICINE-
CiteScore
7.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles on interventions and resources that complement or replace conventional therapies, with a specific emphasis on research that explores the biological mechanisms of action, as well as their efficacy, safety, costs, patterns of use and/or implementation.
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