Transcript Prescribing

What is the Quality
Use of Medicines?
Andrew McLachlan
Professor of Pharmacy (Aged Care)
Faculty of Pharmacy
[email protected]
Medications on admission
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Aspirin 100 mg daily
Methadone 10 mg bd
Dothiepin 50 mg nocte
Irbesartan/HCT 300/12.5 mg
1 daily
Metoprolol 50 mg bd
Diazepam 5mg nocte
Metoclopramide 10 mg tds
Vitamin B12 injection monthly
Amlodipine 5 mg mane
Liquifilm tears eye drops
Fentanyl patch 37.5 mcg/h
Sertraline 50 mg daily
Drug Allergy: NSAIDs
• Carbidopa/levodopa 100/25 mg
2 tds
• Panadol Osteo (665 mg) 2 tds
• Cholecalciferol 2000IU daily
• Multivitamin
• Diphenoxylate/atropine
2.5mg/25microgram (Lomotil) 2
tds
• Omeprazole 20 mg bd
• Gabapentin 300 mg tds
• Oxycodone 5 mg PRN
• Diazepam 5 mg PRN max 3/day
• Temezapam 10 mg PRN nocte
• Panadol Osteo 2 PRN nocte
78 year old female RACF resident
This talk
• What is the quality use of
medicines?
• Evidence and how we use it
• Guiding principles and
guidelines
• Challenges
– Swallowing difficulties
• Ethics and QUM
My conflicts
• Editorial Board member, Australian Medicines
Handbook Aged Care Companion
• Government committees making recommendations
about medicines access and policy
• Medication Reference Group, Australian Commission
for Quality and Safety in Healthcare
• Received research funding from GSK for student
scholarships and clinical trial medicines
• Collaborate with NPS Medicinewise on education
interventions
Australia’s National Medicines Policy
• Aim:
– To meet medication and related
service needs, so that both optimal
health outcomes and economic
objectives are achieved.
• Objectives / Policy Arms:
– timely, cost effective access to
medicines;
– quality, safety and efficacy
standards;
– quality use of medicines (QUM);
– responsible and viable medicines
industry.
http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/content/National+Medicines+Policy-2
Australia's National Medicines Policy
Partnership approach
“Better health through quality use of medicines”
QUALITY USE OF MEDICINES
• Quality Use of Medicines is defined as:
–selecting management options wisely;
–choosing suitable medicines if a medicine is
considered necessary; and
–using medicines safely and effectively.
“Better health through quality use of medicines”
QUALITY USE OF MEDICINES
• Quality Use of Medicines is defined as:
–selecting management options wisely;
–choosing suitable medicines if a medicine is
considered necessary; and
–using medicines safely and effectively.
“Better health through quality use of medicines”
….using medicines safely and effectively
Limited
Relevant
Evidence
Principles of
drug action
Optimal drug, dose regimen and dose form
http://www.bmj.com/content/319/7211/652.full
Concentration-Effect Relationship
Probability
Benefits
Harms
Drug Dose
….using medicines safely and effectively
“All substances are poisons; there is none
which is not a poison. The right dose
differentiates a poison from a remedy”
Phillipus Aureolus Theophrastus
Bombastas Von Hohenheim
Paracelsus (16th Century)
Therapeutics
Pharmacokinetics
Dose
Pharmacodynamics
Concentration
in blood
Effect
Older people are at greater risk of adverse effects,
medication errors and adverse drug reactions
Adverse effects in older patients
Reduction in
organ function
Altered
pharmacokinetics
Altered
pharmacodynamic
Reduced
homeostatic function
Adverse effects
Multiple
diseases
Multiple
prescribers
Multiple
medicines
Poor
adherence
“Balanced prescribing is a process that
recommends a medicine appropriate to the
patient’s condition and, within the limits
created by the uncertainty that attends
therapeutic decisions, a dosage regimen that
optimizes the balance of benefit to harm”
http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/Content/nmp-pdf-resguide-cnt.htm
http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/Content/nmp-pdf-resguide-cnt.htm
http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/publishing.nsf/Content/nmp-pdfresguide-cnt.htm
Medicines in people with swallowing
difficulties
• Not all medications are
appropriate to be crushed
• Medication omission
due to “nil by mouth”
• Limited evidence to inform
practice
Medication Modification:
What are the problems
• Many tablets may be crushed or capsules
opened
• Considerations with dose form modification
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Efficacy
Pharmacokinetics
Adverse effects
Suitability (e.g IV access)
Strachan I, Greener M. Medication-related swallowing difficulties may be more common than we realise. Pharmacy in Practice
2005:411-14.
D Wright et al, Consensus guidelines on medication management of adults with swallowing difficulties Medication management of
adults with swallowing difficulties 2006 Mendendium
Retrospective review of medication
management issues in people with swallowing
difficulties
Most commonly identified problematic
medications in dysphagia by class (n= 100)
Drug Class
Proton Pump Inhibitor
Antiplatelet agents
Electrolyte Supplement
Anticonvulsants
Iron Supplements
% cases
25
15
9
8
6
Perry et al, 2011
Information, evidence and confusion
Combined
n= 59
Nurses
n= 25
Doctors
n= 17*
Pharmacists
n= 16
%
%
%
%
Identified that oxycodone SR
cannot be crushed
78
72
65
100
Correctly converted
metformin XR dose to
standard release
55
36
41
100
Recognised the significance
of withholding venlafaxine
52
12
71
94
Clinical question: themed by
correct response
* n=17 as one respondent did not complete the clinical questions
Perry et al, 2011
A guide……
Medication reconciliation
• Transitions of care
• Accurate medication history
– All medicines
– Adherence
• Discharge medicines
Medication Reconciliation
• The process of MATCHING
UP the medicines that the
patient should be
prescribed with those that
are actually prescribed.
• Helps ensure continuity of
care and prevent or
minimise medication
errors.
Medication Reconciliation
4 simple steps to improve patient safety
1. Obtain and document best possible medication history
•
Thorough and structured interview with patient/carer
2. Confirm the accuracy of the medication history
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Confirm information with at least second source
3. Reconcile history with inpatient medication chart. Document
issues, discrepancies and actions.
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Ensure patients are receiving all intended medicines
4. Reconcile on discharge and provide accurate medicines
information when care is transferred.
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Transfer between wards, hospitals , home, aged care facility provide
an accurate and complete list of patient’s medicines
Second Source for Medication History
• A requirement of National Standard 4 Medication
Safety and compliance with action 4.6.1 “a best
possible medication history is documented for each
patient”
• Carer, GP, Community Pharmacy, dispensed packages,
personal/patient-controlled electronic health record
(PCEHR)
• But the 2nd source can also be wrong! Clinical
judgement is necessary.
Medication reconciliation
Helpful link
www.safetyandquality.gov.au/our-work/medication-safety/medication-reconciliation/
Check this out
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dc5jFuba6CI
Prescribing cascade
Rochon and Gurwitz, BMJ 1997
Methadone + fentanyl
oxycodone + lomotil +
dothiepin
Persistent
nausea
Metoclopramide
+ dothiepin
Dopaminergic side effects /
bradykinesia
Carbidopa/
levodopa
….choosing suitable medicines if a
medicine is considered necessary
"Any symptom in an elderly
patient should be considered a
drug side effect until proven
otherwise."
J Gurwitz, M Monane, S Monane, J Avorn
Brown University Long-term Care Quality Letter 1995
“QUM and The Life Journey”
healthy
acutely ill
chronically unwell
severely ill
very frail
dying
Medicines have a
role in each stage of
the health journey
Changing goal of
pharmacotherapy
Shift in the HarmBenefit balance
Weekes L, J Pharm Pract Res Sept 2009
Ethics and Evidence
• Autonomy
• Beneficence
• Non-maleficence
• Justice
Ethics and QUM
• Autonomy
Respective a persons choice, effective
communication about medicines
• Beneficence
Evidence of benefit
• Non-maleficence
Evidence of harm
• Justice
Equity and access to medicines in a sustainable way
Le Couteur DG, Ford GA, McLachlan AJ. Ethics, Evidence and Medication Management in the Elderly.
J Pharm Pract Res 2010
QUM and older people
• Rationale for commencing a medicine
• Individualising therapy (drug, dose regimen, dose
form)
• Monitoring strategy to assess benefits and harms
• Plan to review pharmacotherapy regimen
• Rationale for continuing medicines
• Rationale for ceasing medicines
Acknowledgements
NHMRC Project Grant Research Funding
NHMRC Centre for Research Excellence – Medicines and Ageing
Pharmacy Age Care Research Team
• (Dr Sasha Bennett)
• Michael Dolton
• Shane Eagles
• Christina Abdel Shaheed
• Atheer Jassim
• Daniel Rifkin
• Bei Lin
Dysphagia Project
• Jonathan Perry
• Nicole Clayton
• Helen Ryan
CERA collaborators
• A/Prof Vasi Naganathan
• Prof David Le Couteur
• Dr Robyn McCarthy
• Dr Fiona Blyth
Also
• Angela Wai, Medication
Safety & Pharmacy
Educator - SLHD