The Practice Guidelines for Multidose Drug Dispensing Need Revision—An Investigation of Prescription Problems and Interventions
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23472Date
2021-01-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Multidose drug dispensing (MDD) is an adherence aid used by one-third of patients receiving home care services in Norway. The system can increase patient safety by reducing dispensing
errors and increase adherence, however it has also been criticised for unclear routines and distribution
of responsibilities. We investigated prescription problems which pharmacists have detected, and
the responsibilities they adopt regarding MDD. For two consecutive weeks, 11 pharmacies used
a self-completion form to register prescription problems identified with MDD. Of the 4121 MDD
prescriptions, problems were identified on 424 (11%). The most common issues were expired prescriptions (29%), drug shortages (19%), missing prescriber signatures (10%) and unclear/missing
medication names or strengths (10%). Compared to ordinary prescriptions, the pharmacist took on
additional responsibility for renewing MDD prescriptions. However, because these patients received
their medications via the home care service, there was limited patient counselling during dispensing.
To increase the efficiency and patient safety of the MDD system, the roles and responsibilities of the
pharmacist, GP, and home care nurses in the MDD system should be clearly defined. This seems
most urgent for the renewal of prescriptions and patient counselling, where the responsibilities and
work practice seem to differ from ordinary prescriptions.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Jøsendal AV, Bergmo TS, Granås AG. The Practice Guidelines for Multidose Drug Dispensing Need Revision—An Investigation of Prescription Problems and Interventions. Pharmacy. 2021Metadata
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