» Articles » PMID: 38744561

Pharmacist, Nurse, and Physician Perspectives on the Implementation of the Pharmacist Discharge Care (pharm-dc) Intervention: A Qualitative Study

Overview
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Pharmacy
Date 2024 May 14
PMID 38744561
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: The PHARMacist Discharge Care (PHARM-DC) intervention is a pharmacist-led Transitions of Care (TOC) program intended to reduce 30-day hospital readmissions and emergency department visits which has been implemented at two hospitals in the United States. The objectives of this study were to: 1) explore perspectives surrounding the PHARM-DC program from healthcare providers, leaders, and administrators at both institutions, and 2) identify factors which may contribute to intervention success and sustainability.

Methods: Focus groups and interviews were conducted with pharmacists, physicians, nurses, hospital leaders, and pharmacy administrators at two institutions in the Northeastern and Western United States. Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed, with transcriptions imported into NVivo for qualitative analysis. Thematic analysis was performed using an iterative process, with two study authors independently coding transcripts to identify themes.

Results: Overall, 37 individuals participated in ten focus groups and seven interviews. The themes identified included: 1) Organizational, Pharmacist, and Patient Factors Contributing to Transitions of Care, 2) Medication Challenges in Transitions of Care at Admission and Discharge, 3) Transitions of Care Communication and Discharge Follow-up, and 4) Opportunities for Improvement and Sustainability. The four themes were mapped to the constructs of the CFIR and RE-AIM frameworks. Some factors facilitating intervention success and sustainability were accurate medication histories collected on admission, addressing medication barriers before discharge, coordinating discharge using electronic health record discharge features, and having a structured process for intervention training and delivery. Barriers to intervention implementation and sustainability included gaps in communication with other care team members, and variable pharmacist skills for delivering the intervention. This study identified that using educational resources to standardize the TOC process addressed the issue of variations in pharmacists' skills for delivering TOC interventions.

Conclusions: Nurses, physicians, pharmacists, pharmacist leaders, and hospital administrators were in agreement regarding the usefulness of the PHARM-DC intervention, while acknowledging challenges in its implementation and opportunities for improvement. Future research should focus on developing training materials to standardize and scale the intervention, eliminating barriers to medication access pre-discharge, coordinating discharge across care team members, and communicating medication changes to primary care providers post-discharge.

Citing Articles

Telepharmacy for outpatients with cancer: An implementation evaluation of videoconsults compared to telephone consults using the CFIR 2.0.

Ryan M, Ward E, Burns C, Carrington C, Cuff K, Mackinnon M Explor Res Clin Soc Pharm. 2024; 16:100501.

PMID: 39308557 PMC: 11415766. DOI: 10.1016/j.rcsop.2024.100501.

References
1.
. Handoffs: Transitions of Care for Children in the Emergency Department. Pediatrics. 2016; 138(5). DOI: 10.1542/peds.2016-2680. View

2.
Dawson C, Pham A, Shipman C, Lau G, Pham Y . Implementation and expansion of inpatient and ambulatory pharmacist credentialing and privileging at an academic medical center. Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2023; 80(12):756-764. DOI: 10.1093/ajhp/zxad005. View

3.
Blum M, Sallevelt B, Spinewine A, OMahony D, Moutzouri E, Feller M . Optimizing Therapy to Prevent Avoidable Hospital Admissions in Multimorbid Older Adults (OPERAM): cluster randomised controlled trial. BMJ. 2021; 374:n1585. PMC: 8276068. DOI: 10.1136/bmj.n1585. View

4.
Pevnick J, Keller M, Kennelty K, Nuckols T, Ko E, Amer K . The Pharmacist Discharge Care (PHARM-DC) study: A multicenter RCT of pharmacist-directed transitional care to reduce post-hospitalization utilization. Contemp Clin Trials. 2021; 106:106419. PMC: 8276883. DOI: 10.1016/j.cct.2021.106419. View

5.
Kwan B, McGinnes H, Ory M, Estabrooks P, Waxmonsky J, Glasgow R . RE-AIM in the Real World: Use of the RE-AIM Framework for Program Planning and Evaluation in Clinical and Community Settings. Front Public Health. 2019; 7:345. PMC: 6883916. DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2019.00345. View