» Articles » PMID: 20441116

The Impact of Pharmacy Computerised Clinical Decision Support on Prescribing, Clinical and Patient Outcomes: a Systematic Review of the Literature

Overview
Specialties Pharmacology
Pharmacy
Date 2010 May 6
PMID 20441116
Citations 25
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objectives: Computerised clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) are being used increasingly to support evidence-based decision-making by health care professionals. This systematic review evaluated the impact of CDSSs targeting pharmacists on physician prescribing, clinical and patient outcomes. We compared the impact of CDSSs addressing safety concerns (drug interactions, contraindications, dose monitoring and adjustment) and those focusing on medicines use in line with guideline recommendations (hereafter referred to as Quality Use of Medicines, or QUM). We also examined the influence of clinical setting (institutional versus ambulatory care), system- or user-initiation of CDSS, prescribing versus clinical outcomes reported and use of multi-faceted versus single interventions on system effectiveness.

Methods: We searched Medline, Embase, CINAHL and PsycINFO (1990-2009) for methodologically adequate studies (experiments and strong quasi-experiments) comparing a CDSS with usual pharmacy care. Individual study results are reported as positive trends or statistically significant results in the direction of the intentions of the CDSS being tested. Studies are aggregated and compared as the proportions of studies showing the effectiveness of the CDSS on the majority (> or = 50%) of outcomes reported in the individual study.

Key Findings: Of 21 eligible studies, 11 addressed safety and 10 QUM issues. CDSSs addressing safety issues were more effective than CDSSs focusing on QUM (10/11 versus 4/10 studies reporting statistically significant improvements in favour of CDSSs on > or = 50% of all outcomes reported; P = 0.01). A number of QUM studies noted the limited contact between pharmacists and physicians relating to QUM treatment recommendations. More studies demonstrated CDSS benefits on prescribing outcomes than clinical outcomes (10/10 versus 0/3 studies; P = 0.002). There were too few studies to assess the impact of system- versus user-initiated CDSS, the influence of setting or multi-faceted interventions on CDSS effectiveness.

Conclusions: Our study demonstrated greater effectiveness of safety-focused compared with QUM-focused CDSSs. Medicine safety issues are traditional areas of pharmacy activity. Without good communication between pharmacists and physicians, the full benefits of QUM-focused CDSSs may not be realised. Developments in pharmacy-based CDSSs need to consider these inter-professional relationships as well as computer-system enhancements.

Citing Articles

Advancing Pharmacy Practice: The Role of Intelligence-Driven Pharmacy Practice and the Emergence of Pharmacointelligence.

Hatem N Integr Pharm Res Pract. 2024; 13:139-153.

PMID: 39220215 PMC: 11363916. DOI: 10.2147/IPRP.S466748.


Detection of Drug-Related Problems through a Clinical Decision Support System Used by a Clinical Pharmacy Team.

Robert L, Cuvelier E, Rousseliere C, Gautier S, Odou P, Beuscart J Healthcare (Basel). 2023; 11(6).

PMID: 36981484 PMC: 10048130. DOI: 10.3390/healthcare11060827.


End-users feedback and perceptions associated with the implementation of a clinical-rule based Check of Medication Appropriateness service.

Quintens C, Peetermans W, Van der Linden L, Declercq P, van den Bosch B, Spriet I BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2022; 22(1):177.

PMID: 35790983 PMC: 9258110. DOI: 10.1186/s12911-022-01921-7.


Effect of Interventions With a Clinical Decision Support System for Hospitalized Older Patients: Systematic Review Mapping Implementation and Design Factors.

Damoiseaux-Volman B, Van der Velde N, Ruige S, Romijn J, Abu-Hanna A, Medlock S JMIR Med Inform. 2021; 9(7):e28023.

PMID: 34269682 PMC: 8325084. DOI: 10.2196/28023.


Clinical decision support systems-based interventions to improve medication outcomes: A systematic literature review on features and effects.

Shahmoradi L, Safdari R, Ahmadi H, Zahmatkeshan M Med J Islam Repub Iran. 2021; 35:27.

PMID: 34169039 PMC: 8214039. DOI: 10.47176/mjiri.35.27.