Implementation of a shared medication list in primary care - a controlled pre-post study of medication discrepancies
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24038Dato
2021-12-13Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Methods: In 2018, eSML was tested for patients in home care who received multidose drug dispensing (MDD) in Oslo, Norway. We followed this transition from the current paper-based medication list to an eSML. Medication lists from the GP, home care service and community pharmacy were compared 3months before the implementation and 18months after. MDD patients in a neighbouring district in Oslo served as a control group.
Results: One hundred eighty-nine patients were included (100 intervention; 89 control). Discrepancies were reduced from 389 to 122 (p < 0.001) in the intervention group, and from 521 to 503 in the control group (p =0.734). After the implementation, the share of mutual prescription items increased from 77 to 94%. Missing prescriptions for psycholeptics, analgesics and dietary supplements was reduced the most.
Conclusions: The eSML greatly decreases discrepancies between the GP, home care and pharmacy medication lists, but does not eliminate the need for medication reconciliation.