An Internationally Derived Process of Healthcare Professionals’ Proactive Deprescribing Steps and Constituent Activities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Developing a Draft Proactive Deprescribing Process of Steps and Activities
2.2. Validation of the Proactive Deprescribing Process of Steps and Activities
2.2.1. Survey Development
2.2.2. Survey Distribution
2.3. Sample Size Justification
2.4. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Developing a Draft Process of Proactive Deprescribing Steps and Activities
3.2. Validation of the Proactive Deprescribing Process of Steps and Activities
“Patients may have been started and told they need to be on [the medicine] for life … They may also worry that their condition will deteriorate, and this is more of a concern than potential side effects that may or may not occur.”Pharmacist
“Most challenging are colleagues of other specialties who in some instances are reluctant to stop some medications that are potentially harmful.”Doctor
“Having a multidisciplinary team approach as well as patient engagement. Good communication between primary and secondary care is also important.”Pharmacist
“I need sufficient time, resources and ability to stop medicines successfully on a daily basis.”Pharmacist
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Appendix B
References
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Proactive Deprescribing Step | Activities |
---|---|
Step 1. Identify a patient for potential stop of a medicine | Review medicines for continued appropriateness for every patient under their care [17,19,22,25] When starting a medication, explain to the patient/relative that it will be reviewed regularly and stopped if no longer suitable * [21,23] |
Step 2. Evaluate a patient for potential stop of a medicine | Ask the patient/relative to disclose all medications they are taking * [16,20,24,25] Evaluate if the patient/relative is taking their medication as prescribed [25] Ask the patient/relative about their thoughts and experiences of taking their medication * [25] Establish if the medication is meeting the patient’s goals and priorities * [20,24] Consider the patient’s life expectancy [20,24] Consider alternative non-pharmacological options [16] Consider the likelihood of benefit and harm from continuing to prescribe the medicine(s) [17,18,24] Consider the likelihood of benefit and harm from stopping the medicine(s) [17] Provide the patient/informal caregiver with the information gathered about their factors that are relevant to stopping their medicine * [25] |
Step 3. Stop medicine(s) | Invite the patient/informal caregiver to decide if they would like to stop their identified medicine * [22] Establish whether immediate withdrawal or a tapered or weaning approach is needed [23] Recording a plan for stopping the medicine in the patient’s notes or record [17,18] |
Step 4. After a medicine has been stopped | Arrange follow-up appointments * [20] Monitor the patient for adverse drug withdrawal effects * [17] Monitor the patient’s quality of life * [24] |
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Scott, S.; Buac, N.; Bhattacharya, D. An Internationally Derived Process of Healthcare Professionals’ Proactive Deprescribing Steps and Constituent Activities. Pharmacy 2024, 12, 138. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy12050138
Scott S, Buac N, Bhattacharya D. An Internationally Derived Process of Healthcare Professionals’ Proactive Deprescribing Steps and Constituent Activities. Pharmacy. 2024; 12(5):138. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy12050138
Chicago/Turabian StyleScott, Sion, Natalie Buac, and Debi Bhattacharya. 2024. "An Internationally Derived Process of Healthcare Professionals’ Proactive Deprescribing Steps and Constituent Activities" Pharmacy 12, no. 5: 138. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy12050138
APA StyleScott, S., Buac, N., & Bhattacharya, D. (2024). An Internationally Derived Process of Healthcare Professionals’ Proactive Deprescribing Steps and Constituent Activities. Pharmacy, 12(5), 138. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy12050138