Pharmacy Daily

Guild QUM report launch

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THE Victorian Branch of the Pharmacy Guild of Australia has launched the final report of the ‘Improving Medication Reconcilia­tion in Community Settings’ project in Victoria.

Victorian Guild president Anthony Tassone said the project had been developed and implemente­d in partnershi­p with the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) and the Royal District Nursing Service (RDNS).

The aims of the project included understand­ing the barriers and enablers of medication reconcilia­tion service in community pharmacy, given that poor medication reconcilia­tions can result in unplanned hospital admissions, Tassone explained.

“Community pharmacist­s are highly accessible and well placed to provide medication reconcilia­tion,” he said.

The report highlights that 2-3% of Australian hospital admissions are medication related, a figure that has remained unchanged “for over a decade”.

According to the literature, more than 50% of medication errors occur at transition­s of care and 85% of discrepanc­ies in medication treatment originate from poor medication history taking.

In the project’s pilot medication reconcilia­tion service, a community pharmacist educated the patient at three time points over a six monthperio­d on aspects such as dosing, indication for use, interactio­ns, side effects and storage and providing patients and their GPs with a reconciled list of their medication­s.

The pilot results have demonstrat­ed this was not only achievable but would result in better health outcomes with over 80% of participan­ts reporting better understand­ing of their medication­s and increased confidence in managing their medicines.

“Through this pilot we were able to identify and assist patients on multiple medication­s and complex regimens particular­ly following a visit to a specialist or recent hospital admission” said Mehul Mehta, one of the participat­ing pharmacist­s.

Tassone thanked participat­ing pharmacist­s for their contributi­on to the success of the pilot program and the DHHS for supporting the initiative.

Visit guild.org.au for the report.

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