Stakeholder Perspectives on the Development and Implementation of a Polypharmacy Management Program in Germany: Results of a Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Setting
2.3. Participant Selection and Recruitment
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Researchers’ Characteristics
3. Results
3.1. Key Challenges in Multimorbidity and Polypharmacy
3.1.1. Patient Level
“I think the awareness that we’re dealing with something that‘s really dangerous, or potentially dangerous—apart from being a possible godsend, it’s just also a dangerous weapon.”(IP3, general practitioner)
“What I find really difficult—in the guidelines it always says you have to come to a joint decision. […] How are you supposed to communicate that in individual cases? You can’t say to the patient, ‘What would you prefer—a stroke or a gastrointestinal hemorrhage?’”(IP5, Federal Joint Committee)
“... a lack of knowledge on behalf of the patients and relatives about the medication, so that the medication was used wrongly, taken wrongly. And that just leads to a loss of efficacy or a significant increase in the amount of side effects in the patients.”(IP10, pharmacist)
3.1.2. Healthcare Provider Level
“… many multimorbid patients get lost in the system and have the problem that within the system there is no single person that takes responsibility and maintains an overview of, for example, their medication plans.”(IP9, patient representative)
“It’s just that we have the problem that we have cross-sectoral interruptions in care. We have deficits in the transfer of information between individual providers, like specialist-GP, but also between the different health care sectors. And at the end of the day, that’s what causes the problems.”(IP2, statutory health insurance)
“The same problems definitely occur when medications that are actually necessary are left out. The special challenge is to find a structure that enables me to do that responsibly, without causing any harm … without giving too little and without giving too much.”(IP5, Federal Joint Committee)
3.1.3. System-Level
“From a formal perspective, that’s a huge problem because you cross from one sector to another, from one set of laws to another. Nursing is covered by a different set of laws to health insurance, which means it goes beyond the remit of Social Security Statute Book 5 (SGB V), and that leads to enormous formal problems […] the gap between nursing and SGB V. Just because of reimbursement.”(IP5, Federal Joint Committee)
“The challenge is the issue of the quality of medical care in an economic framework. And that is in a group of insured persons that are not the focus of every health insurer’s marketing activities.”(IP2, statutory health insurance)
3.2. Identification of the Target Population
3.2.1. Polypharmacy
“… long-term medication that includes at least five drugs. I can’t think of any other criteria […] What happens at the moment is that we’re supposed to draw up a (medication) plan with (only) three medications. That’s quite simply not manageable.”(IP3, general practitioner)
3.2.2. Morbidity
“I don’t think relying on a number is appropriate because some chronic diagnoses are associated with no particular limitations and don’t really justify the provision of special management. It then makes better sense to focus on providing something on the basis of the indication, and to give priority to indications that result in limitations.”(IP5, Federal Joint Committee)
3.2.3. Age
“It doesn’t depend on age. It can happen to a 30-year old […] problems with interaction are the same as with an 80-year old […] So if you had to define a second criterion, then I’d say that certainly from 50 on makes sense. Because all the illnesses that we want to draw out via the DMP really start earlier.”(IP3, general practitioner)
3.2.4. Hospital Admissions
3.2.5. Patient’s Willingness to Change
“Well, the readiness to change and communicate has to exist, of course.”(IP8, statutory health insurance)
“… it only makes sense when the patient can influence the course of the illness. And that means that he also has a certain control over his lifestyle and that he is actually prepared to change it.”(IP7, Federal Joint Committee)
3.3. Components of the PMP
3.4. Healthcare Providers’ and Stakeholders’ Roles and Tasks
3.5. Barriers
3.5.1. Complexity and Heterogeneity
“I imagine it would be a bit too abstract if I had a polypharmacy or multimorbidity DMP because they are always organized differently. […] The structure of DMP programs is standardized, which means there has to be a precise description of what medical tasks are to be performed and what parameters are to be measured.”(IP6, statutory health insurance)
“Difficult. Unlike other illnesses, there is no laboratory test result, there is no diagnostic method that would permit clear distinctions to be made. […] I assume it would be impossible for a multimorbidity DMP to involve very many specific recommendations for the physician […] because the different configurations are extremely complex. […] so that you certainly couldn’t provide such specific instructions as you can as in the case of coronary heart disease, diabetes or asthma.”(IP5, Federal Joint Committee)
3.5.2. Selection and Measurement of a Potential Outcome
“the issue of ‘I’m going to organize an appropriate drug therapy and avoid who knows how many hospital stays’. […] To do that to such an extent that you can prove it in this very, very heterogeneous group of patients—that is going to be a real challenge. […] Purely from a practicability point of view. After all, counting tablets is not going to get you anywhere, right? What you have to reduce are potential drug risks and mutually reinforcing side effects in particular.”(IP2, statutory health insurance)
3.5.3. Identification of the Target Population
“But I just have to filter out the patients, for whom I actually see an alternative and where I can do something differently, you see?”(IP2, statutory health insurance)
“Clear demarcation of the target group because registration in a DMP is associated with a load of legal consequences and that has to be regulated as clearly as possible. And that’s when it all starts. It’s not all that easy to answer such questions.”(IP5, Federal Joint Committee)
3.5.4. Inadequate Incentives
“Well health insurers generally have a different view to GPs on what constitutes adequate compensation, you see?”(IP2, statutory health insurance)
“[It] would be plagued by the same problem as plagues the medication plan, namely by the question of compensation for the whole thing. […] that’s what determines motivation for the participating disciplines because no one is going to take the time for case conferences as part of a structured medication review or when adjusting medications.”(IP9, patient representative)
“… well, particularly for the multimorbid, […] for them our health system is pretty strongly—how shall I say it? Reliant on physicians, isn’t it? They play a really, really key role. And the consequence of that is that involving other professional groups, pharmacists if you like, or a social worker, a nurse or whatever, well that could be much more difficult. That could really be a barrier.”(IP7, Federal Joint Committee)
3.6. Facilitators
“…this whole topic is becoming increasingly important. That means more and more initiatives are being developed and more and more people are working on these things.”(IP2, statutory health insurance)
3.6.1. Expected Positive Effects of a PMP
“… and that’s of course helpful for the patients over a longer period of time and is of course of great value because he may well be able to achieve a much more stable and improved state of health.”(IP4, Federal Joint Committee)
“It would facilitate the GP’s work—improved cooperation, better overview, a reduction in drug risks and complications. Better treatment.”(IP1, general practitioner)
“… I think it will lead to incredible savings in resources—in terms of consultations and time spent at the practice, time spent at the pharmacist, time consulting specialists and at the interfaces between them. Huge amounts of time will be saved because information pathways will be clearer and better structured.”(IP10, pharmacist)
“When our patients feel well then of course we do too. That always sounds like a contradiction but I don’t think it is—in the sense that a patient whose drug therapy is well balanced and that therefore doesn’t have to go to hospital and doesn’t develop a comorbidity—that is of course a positive factor for the health insurance.”(IP8, statutory health insurance)
3.6.2. Practicability and Feasibility
“It would have to be precisely defined, implementable and most importantly in terms of the time it would involve, requirements would have to be easy to implement for all of the treating professions.”(IP5, Federal Joint Committee)
“And it would have to be easy and practicable enough for the patient.”(IP8, statutory health insurance)
3.6.3. Digitalization
“… but, of course, the integration of tools for analysis as well. They are definitely being developed, and they can help physicians by evaluating all the interactions too.”(IP4, Federal Joint Committee)
“.. A digital tool that includes NNTs, that is ‘number needed to treat”(IP5, Federal Joint Committee)
3.6.4. Legal Framework and Incentives
“Well, to put it simply to start with—the whole thing is probably going to require appropriate legislation.”(IP4, Federal Joint Committee)
“… it would have to include legal safeguards. Yes, it would certainly have to be fixed in writing who was permitted to do what. And ultimately, and that is always one of the key questions, who is going to be compensated for what and who, at the end of the day, is responsible for the outcome.”(IP10, pharmacist)
“In my opinion, it’s exclusively a question of the incentive systems. If the fee is acceptable, they will do it; if it’s not, they won’t.”(IP3, general practitioner)
4. Discussion
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. EVITA Study Group Members and Affiliation
- Institute of General Practice, Goethe University Frankfurt, Theodor-Stern-Kai 7, 60590 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
- Department of Health Economics and Health Care Management, Faculty of Health Science, Bielefeld University, Universitaetsstr. 25, 33615 Bielefeld, Germany
- INSIGHT Health GmbH & Co. KG, Auf der Lind 10a, 65529 Waldems-Esch, Germany
- PMV Research Group, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany
- Head of Department Medicine/Health Care Research, Barmer, Lichtscheider Str. 89, 42285 Wuppertal, Germany
- Department of General Practice and Family Medicine, Medical Faculty OWL, University of Bielefeld, Universitaetsstrasse 25, 33615 Bielefeld, Germany
- Institute of Medical Biometry and Informatics, Heidelberg University Hospital, Im Neuenheimer Feld 130.3, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany
- Institute of Pharmacology and Clinical Pharmacy, Goethe University, Max-von-Laue-Str. 9, 60438 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
- Institute of Pharmaceutical Chemistry/ZAFES, Goethe University, Max-von-Laue-Str. 9, 60438 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
References
- van den Akker, M.; Buntinx, F.; Knottnerus, J.A. Comorbidity or multimorbidity. Eur. J. Gen. Pract. 1996, 2, 65–70. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Morin, L.; Vetrano, D.L.; Rizzuto, D.; Calderón-Larrañaga, A.; Fastbom, J.; Johnell, K. Choosing Wisely? Measuring the Burden of Medications in Older Adults near the End of Life: Nationwide, Longitudinal Cohort Study. Am. J. Med. 2017, 130, 927–936.e9. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Haefeli, W.E.; Meid, A.D. Pill-count and the arithmetic of risk: Evidence that polypharmacy is a health status marker rather than a predictive surrogate for the risk of adverse drug events. Int. J. Clin. Pharmacol. Ther. 2018, 56, 572–576. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Thavorn, K.; Maxwell, C.J.; Gruneir, A.; Bronskill, S.E.; Bai, Y.; Koné Pefoyo, A.J.; Petrosyan, Y.; Wodchis, W.P. Effect of socio-demographic factors on the association between multimorbidity and healthcare costs: A population-based, retrospective cohort study. BMJ Open 2017, 7, e017264. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- WHO. Chronic Diseases and Health Promotion: Integrated Chronic Disease Prevention and Control. Available online: https://www.who.int/chp/about/integrated_cd/en/ (accessed on 5 February 2021).
- Bundesamt für Soziale Sicherung. Disease Management Programme: Zulassung der Strukturierten Behandlungsprogramme (Disease Management Programme—DMP) durch das Bundesamt für Soziale Sicherung. Available online: https://www.bundesamtsozialesicherung.de/de/themen/disease-management-programme/dmp-grundlegende-informationen/ (accessed on 5 February 2021).
- Gemeinsamer Bundesausschuss. Disease-Management-Programme. Available online: https://www.g-ba.de/themen/disease-management-programme/ (accessed on 2 May 2022).
- Cohen-Stavi, C.J.; Giveon, S.; Key, C.; Molcho, T.; Balicer, R.; Shadmi, E. Guideline deviation and its association with specific chronic diseases among patients with multimorbidity: A cross-sectional cohort study in a care management setting. BMJ Open 2021, 11, e040961. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Muth, C.; Blom, J.W.; Smith, S.M.; Johnell, K.; Gonzalez-Gonzalez, A.I.; Nguyen, T.S.; Brueckle, M.-S.; Cesari, M.; Tinetti, M.E.; Valderas, J.M. Evidence supporting the best clinical management of patients with multimorbidity and polypharmacy: A systematic guideline review and expert consensus. J. Intern. Med. 2019, 285, 272–288. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Dinh, T.S.; Brueckle, M.-S.; González-González, A.I.; Fessler, J.; Marschall, U.; Schubert-Zsilavesz, M.; Gerlach, F.M.; Harder, S.; van den Akker, M.; Schubert, I.; et al. Evidence-Based Decision Support for a Structured Care Program on Polypharmacy in Multimorbidity: A Guideline Upgrade Based on a Realist Synthesis. J. Pers. Med. 2022, 12, 69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Lappe, V.; Dinh, T.S.; Harder, S.; Brueckle, M.-S.; Fessler, J.; Marschall, U.; Muth, C.; Schubert, I. Multimedication Guidelines: Assessment of the Size of the Target Group for Medication Review and Description of the Frequency of Their Potential Drug Safety Problems with Routine Data. Pharmacoepidemiology 2022, 1, 12–25. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tong, A.; Sainsbury, P.; Craig, J. Consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ): A 32-item checklist for interviews and focus groups. Int. J. Qual. Health Care 2007, 19, 349–357. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Kaiser, R. Qualitative Experteninterviews; Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden: Wiesbaden, Germany, 2014; ISBN 978-3-658-02478-9. [Google Scholar]
- Gemeinsamer Bundesausschuss. The Federal Joint Committee: Who We Are and What We Do. Available online: https://www.g-ba.de/english/structure/ (accessed on 29 April 2022).
- Gemeinsamer Bundesausschuss. Patient Involvement. Available online: https://www.g-ba.de/english/structure/patient/ (accessed on 29 April 2022).
- Bogner, A.; Littig, B.; Menz, W. Interviews Mit Experten; Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden: Wiesbaden, Germany, 2014; ISBN 978-3-531-19415-8. [Google Scholar]
- Helfferich, C. Die Qualität Qualitativer Daten: Manual für die Durchführung Qualitativer Interviews, 4th ed.; VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften: Wiesbaden, Germany, 2011. [Google Scholar]
- Mayring, P. Qualitative Inhaltsanalyse: Grundlagen und Techniken, 12., überarb. Aufl.; Beltz: Weinheim, Germany, 2015; ISBN 9783407293930. [Google Scholar]
- McIntosh, J.; Alonso, A.; MacLure, K.; Stewart, D.; Kempen, T.; Mair, A.; Castel-Branco, M.; Codina, C.; Fernandez-Llimos, F.; Fleming, G.; et al. A case study of polypharmacy management in nine European countries: Implications for change management and implementation. PLoS ONE 2018, 13, e0195232. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Brueckle, M.-S.; Dinh, T.S.; Klein, A.-A.; Rietschel, L.; Petermann, J.; Brosse, F.; Schulz-Rothe, S.; Gonzalez-Gonzalez, A.I.; Kramer, M.; Engler, J.; et al. Development of an intervention to improve informational continuity of care in older patients with polypharmacy at the interface between general practice and hospital care: Protocol for a participatory qualitative study in Germany. BMJ Open 2022, 12, e058016. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Mergenthal, K.; Beyer, M.; Gerlach, F.M.; Guethlin, C. Sharing Responsibilities within the General Practice Team—A Cross-Sectional Study of Task Delegation in Germany. PLoS ONE 2016, 11, e0157248. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
Component | Details | Quotes |
---|---|---|
Basic assessment | Assessment of patient’s individual overall status (e.g., diseases, functionality, quality of life) for the majority of patients, whereby the assessment can/should be conducted in cooperation with other involved healthcare providers | “… in these patients, you really need to have determined the status quo very recently in order to assess which of the underlying illnesses are actually present and which are dominant in the whole affair. You have to find out very precisely how, so-to-say, the patient is feeling, the whole question of functionality, what is his quality of life like, what is he going through? That’s the starting point.” (IP4, G-BA) |
Medication review | Overview and inventory of medications, prioritization and (de-)prescribing of medications, checking for interactions and side effects, pharmacological counselling | “… documentation of all the active substances is key. That’s the basic story. And then the weighting: what should be prioritized? And which of the various combinations present risks? Or are there too many active substances, so that the combination of them all is no longer manageable, can’t be evaluated and may possibly lead to problems?” (IP1, GP) |
Monitoring and regular routine checks | Regular consultations for monitoring purposes and defined intervals after which medication-related parameters should be checked | “… the most important thing is that the program defines the structure of the intervals: At what intervals does it make sense to routinely check something? […] For what group of medications does it make sense to check which parameters and in what intervals? It would be important to work on something like that for a polypharmacy-DMP.” (IP3, GP) |
Case conferences | Case conferences during which healthcare providers work together as a team with clearly defined responsibilities (focus on patient as a whole, not only on medications) | “And you can develop that further in the severe cases—then it’s not a one-man show any longer. In such specialized settings, it might also be possible that several experts are involved, who then work as a team.” (IP4, G-BA) “…such case conferences are ultimately to consider the patient as a whole, and not just necessary for a patient’s medication.” (IP9, PR) |
Care coordinator | Named care coordinator (e.g., GP) that has an overview of all of a patient’s medications and healthcare activities, that guides the process, and is the first port of call for patients | “… I think the GP should play a key role in this respect, because in a best-case scenario he is the one that guides, instructs, advises and of course has an overview of the medications and should be competent enough to assess what is feasible and what might be risky […] Yes, in my opinion we’d be making huge progress if the GP were the main contact person as a matter of principle.” (IP1, GP) “Well, the conclusion I draw is that this clientele in particular requires primary care to take on a bigger role.” (IP7, G-BA) |
Healthcare assistants-led case management | Management of patients’ care (needs) (e.g., communication with patients, tele-monitoring, home visits) including specific polypharmacy training for healthcare assistants | “But I assume that […] the main instrument to somehow deal with exactly that problem of lack of time and the demand for greater delegation between […] HCAs and physicians […] will definitely be something like case management. That is to say a structure in which non-physician professions proactively approach patients, […] either on the phone or by means of tele-monitoring, or even home visits, and in this structured way gather information from patients, and engage in structured discussions from which it is possible to recognize what the patient sees as the main problem, and what is most important to the patient. And then to reconcile that with the things that the treating physicians nonetheless consider necessary et cetera.” (IP5, G-BA) “Yes, well it’s not only training for patients that we should be thinking about, but also for health care assistants […] on how to interact with patients, how to record information on medications, how to prepare them. That is to say: How to enter them into the medication plan and how to treat it.” (IP3, GP) |
Cooperation with pharmacists | Involvement of pharmacists, e.g., for a structured medication inventory including OTC, and regular and occasional consultations between GPs and pharmacists | “The [pharmacists], on the other hand, should provide feedback to the physicians, who know about the therapy and provide therapy in accordance with guidelines, but perhaps don’t have a complete overview of all the things they, the patients, are taking, right? […] Maybe doses should be adjusted. That means there should be close cooperation between physicians and pharmacists.” (IP6, SHI) “Regular consultations between the patient’s GP and regular pharmacist because the GP and the regular pharmacist should be defined, in my opinion. And after every change in the interface (different health care providers) consultations should take place and the polypharmacy and changes should be looked at.” (IP10, PH) |
Patient education | Tailored training and independent patient information on the management of medications, empowerment to make shared decisions and to express preferences, and the introduction of patients to self-help groups and patient networks | “… in that case I’d provide the patient with a training program to demonstrate how to deal with polypharmacy.” (IP2, SHI) “And then some kind of training instrument should also be included in this area in my opinion. That means activating the patient so that he participates by doing what he can, so that, when that has been activated, shared and informed decisions can actually be made.” (IP9, PR) |
Social support | Support to enable patients with social care needs to manage their everyday lives (e.g., supported by social workers) | “But in addition to physicians, further professional groups should definitely also be involved. And I could imagine someone providing something along the lines of social support. […] Particularly in multimorbid patients, because I believe that in that case, there are many things that aren’t exclusively linked to medical therapies, but like, as I said, things like how to manage your everyday life, you see?” (IP7, G-BA) |
Stakeholder | Role/Task |
---|---|
Patient (representative) and associations of chronically ill persons |
|
General practitioner |
|
Medical societies representing other involved healthcare providers |
|
Statutory health insurers |
|
Federal Joint Committee |
|
Software developer |
|
Research |
|
Stakeholder | Role/Task |
---|---|
Patient |
|
Caregiver |
|
General practitioner |
|
Healthcare assistant |
|
Other healthcare providers from the outpatient and inpatient setting |
|
Statutory health insurers |
|
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Dinh, T.S.; Brueckle, M.-S.; González-González, A.I.; Witte, J.; van den Akker, M.; Gerlach, F.M.; Muth, C.; on behalf of the EVITA Study Group. Stakeholder Perspectives on the Development and Implementation of a Polypharmacy Management Program in Germany: Results of a Qualitative Study. J. Pers. Med. 2022, 12, 1115. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12071115
Dinh TS, Brueckle M-S, González-González AI, Witte J, van den Akker M, Gerlach FM, Muth C, on behalf of the EVITA Study Group. Stakeholder Perspectives on the Development and Implementation of a Polypharmacy Management Program in Germany: Results of a Qualitative Study. Journal of Personalized Medicine. 2022; 12(7):1115. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12071115
Chicago/Turabian StyleDinh, Truc Sophia, Maria-Sophie Brueckle, Ana Isabel González-González, Julian Witte, Marjan van den Akker, Ferdinand M. Gerlach, Christiane Muth, and on behalf of the EVITA Study Group. 2022. "Stakeholder Perspectives on the Development and Implementation of a Polypharmacy Management Program in Germany: Results of a Qualitative Study" Journal of Personalized Medicine 12, no. 7: 1115. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12071115
APA StyleDinh, T. S., Brueckle, M. -S., González-González, A. I., Witte, J., van den Akker, M., Gerlach, F. M., Muth, C., & on behalf of the EVITA Study Group. (2022). Stakeholder Perspectives on the Development and Implementation of a Polypharmacy Management Program in Germany: Results of a Qualitative Study. Journal of Personalized Medicine, 12(7), 1115. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12071115