Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04663360

Medication Monitoring for Older Adults in Primary Care

Medication Monitoring in General Practice: Clinical Impact of Implementing a Nurse-led Adverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) Profile in Older Adults With 5 or More Prescribed Medicines

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
19 (actual)
Sponsor
Swansea University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
64 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Polypharmacy has the potential to harm older adults by causing cognitive impairment, falls, and hospitalisations. Many adverse drug reactions could be prevented with closer monitoring. This project will establish the effectiveness of the nurse-led intervention - the ADRe Profile - for medicines commonly prescribed in primary care and evaluate intervention implementation in general practices.

Detailed description

The number of medicines people take is increasing. Older adults are particularly at risk of adverse drug reactions due to polypharmacy. Adverse drug reactions cause avoidable patient harm, and around 5-8% of unplanned hospital admissions in the UK, costing the NHS £1.5-2.5bn pa. Many adverse drug reactions could be prevented with closer monitoring. The nurse-led Adverse Drug Reactions Profile (ADRe Profile) represents a unique instrument that records patients' observations and self-reported information on signs and symptoms that is likely to relate to an adverse reaction to medications. This project will establish the effectiveness of ADRe Profile in identifying patient problems possibly resulting from medicines in general practices and will be implemented in 3 phases. Phase 1 (4 months) Validity and reliability testing of the ADRe Profile will be performed with key stakeholders (patients, nurses, care assistants, GP's and pharmacists), before introducing the tool to general practices. Feasibility testing will also be undertaken. Phase 2 (12 months) The aim of this phase is to test whether the ADRe Profile identifies and ameliorates health problems. The practice nurse (or the researcher) will perform an ADRe consultation with a group of eligible service users and compare the number and nature of health and well-being problems identified with a similar group of service users who receive normal care. Phase 3 (6 months) Finally, to further explore the impact of the ADRe Profile, the researchers will conduct semi-structured interviews with health professionals (nurses, care assistants, GPs and pharmacists) and service users. The investigators hope that this study will help patients gain maximum benefits from their medicines and support nurses, pharmacists and GP's to reduce any bothersome side effects and problems that, if not addressed promptly, can lead to hospital admissions.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERAdverse Drug Reaction (ADRe) ProfileADRe asks nurses to systematically check patients for the manifestation of itemised adverse side effects or undesirable effects of their primary care medicines, as listed in the BNF and manufacturers' Summaries of Product Characteristics (SmPCs), and seminal texts documenting known ADRs. Nurses are asked to share the identified problems with prescribers and pharmacists overseeing medicines charts.

Timeline

Start date
2020-01-05
Primary completion
2020-05-31
Completion
2020-10-04
First posted
2020-12-11
Last updated
2021-10-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04663360. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.