Establishing a Pharmacy-Based Patient Registry System: A Pilot Study for Evaluating Pharmacist Intervention for Patients with Long-Term Medication Use
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Disclosure
Appendix A. Data Collection at the Initial and Follow-Up Assessments
- Patient’s ID (automatically assigned at registration)
- Age and sex
- Clinical conditions for long-term medication use
- Date of informed consent
- Contact information if needed
- List of all medications used by the patient (not only dispensed medication at the pharmacy, but also those dispensed at different pharmacies)
- Treatment history
- Other conditions not for long-term medication use
- Lab results (blood pressure, lipid, HbA1c, etc.)
- Treatment conditions (one-pack doses, number of clinics used, etc.)
- Living environments related to treatment (living alone, job, home care, etc.)
- Potential problems reported by patient
- Potential concerns identified by pharmacist
- Preferred methods for follow-up contacts
- Others
- Date of contacts
- Method for monitoring (telephone or visit)
- Changes in medications
- Patient reported adherence or number of medications not used
- Reason for not taking medications as instructed
- Conditional changes (if any)
- Lab results (reported by patients)
- Pharmacist advice given to patients
- Next appointment dates
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Category | Potential Problems | Pharmacist Intervention (Suggestion or Recommendation) | Patient Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|
1. Medication Use | |||
Forget to take medicine when eating out | Keep some tablets in the bag constantly | Adherence was improved. | |
Forget to take medicine when busy with work | Put the medicine in a conspicuous place Notice that the medicine could be taken also before eating | Adherence was improved. | |
2. Concerns | |||
High blood sugar level despite efforts | Wait for the result of the next health check-up, and consider the possibility of hyperglycemia after a meal, as the current average blood sugar level is still better than before | The blood sugar level fell to the normal range on the next measurement. | |
Blood pressure variation (low in the morning and high in the night) | Receive counseling from the family doctor | Concern disappeared after hearing that it was not necessary to mind this. | |
3. Physical Complaint | |||
Chest ache after exercise | Get medical consultation for angina pectoris fear | The patient underwent detailed examination and was diagnosed and operated on for angina pectoris. | |
Dizziness | Drink more water or tea because of possible side effect | Dizziness disappeared after several weeks. | |
4. Others | |||
No interest in the results of the health check | Promote health education | The patient became interested in the value of health check-ups (e.g., purchased books); motivation to receive medical treatment increased. |
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Akazawa, M.; Mikami, A.; Tamura, Y.; Yanagi, N.; Yamamura, S.; Ogata, H. Establishing a Pharmacy-Based Patient Registry System: A Pilot Study for Evaluating Pharmacist Intervention for Patients with Long-Term Medication Use. Pharmacy 2018, 6, 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy6010012
Akazawa M, Mikami A, Tamura Y, Yanagi N, Yamamura S, Ogata H. Establishing a Pharmacy-Based Patient Registry System: A Pilot Study for Evaluating Pharmacist Intervention for Patients with Long-Term Medication Use. Pharmacy. 2018; 6(1):12. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy6010012
Chicago/Turabian StyleAkazawa, Manabu, Akiko Mikami, Yuri Tamura, Natsuyo Yanagi, Shinichi Yamamura, and Hiroyasu Ogata. 2018. "Establishing a Pharmacy-Based Patient Registry System: A Pilot Study for Evaluating Pharmacist Intervention for Patients with Long-Term Medication Use" Pharmacy 6, no. 1: 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy6010012
APA StyleAkazawa, M., Mikami, A., Tamura, Y., Yanagi, N., Yamamura, S., & Ogata, H. (2018). Establishing a Pharmacy-Based Patient Registry System: A Pilot Study for Evaluating Pharmacist Intervention for Patients with Long-Term Medication Use. Pharmacy, 6(1), 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmacy6010012