Pharmacology
Pharmacist Interventions to Reduce Modifiable Bleeding Risk Factors Using HAS-BLED in Patients Taking Warfarin
Use of risk scores and pharmacist follow-up could reduce bleeding risk in patients on anticoagulation therapy.
John Thomas and Anne Hyson are Physicians, John Sellinger is a Psychologist, Marcia Mecca is a Geriatrician and the Medical Director of the IMPROVE Clinic, and Rebecca Brienza is a Physician and Director of the West Haven CoEPCE at VA Connecticut Health Care System. Annette Gardner is an Assistant Professor at the University of California, San Francisco. Kristina Niehoff is a Pharmacist at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. Sean Jeffery is a Clinical Professor of Pharmacy Practice at the University of Connecticut School of Pharmacy in Storrs. Marcia Mecca and Rebecca Brienza are Assistant Professors at Yale University School of Medicine in New Haven, Connecticut.
Author disclosures
The authors report no actual or potential conflicts of interest with regard to this article.
Disclaimer
The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Federal Practitioner, Frontline Medical Communications Inc., the US Government, or any of its agencies.
A structured forum for discussing patients and their care options supports professionals’ utilization of the full scope of their practice. Trainees learn and apply team skills, such as communication and the warm handoff, which can be used in other clinic settings. A warm handoff is often described as an intervention in which “a clinician directly introduces a patient to another clinician at the time of the patient’s visit and often a brief encounter between the patient and the health care professional occurs.”9 An interprofessional care plan supports trainee clinical performance, providing a more robust approach to patient care than individual providers might on their own.
IMPROVE is an enriched care plan informed by multiple professions with the potential to improve medication use and provide better care. Veterans also are receiving better medication education as well as access to a health psychologist who can help them with goal setting and effective behavioral interventions. On average, 5 patients participate each month. As of December 2015, 68 patients have participated in IMPROVE.
The group visit and the 1:1 patient visits focus exclusively on medication issues and solutions, which would be less common in a typical primary care visit with a complex patient who brings a list of agenda items. In addition to taking a thorough look at their medications and related problems, it also educates patients on related issues such as sleep hygiene. Participating veterans also are encouraged to share their concerns, experiences, and solutions with the group, which may increase the saliency of the message beyond what is offered in counseling from a provider.
To date, preliminary data suggest that in some patients, cognition (as measured with SLUMS after 6 months) has modestly improved after decreasing their medications. Other outcomes being monitored in follow-up are utilization of care, reported history of falls, number of medications, and vital signs at initial and follow-up visits.
Patients experience increased continuity of care because the patient now has a team focusing on his or her care. Team members have a shared understanding of the patient’s situation and are better able to establish therapeutic rapport with patients during the group visit. Moreover, CoEPCE trainees and faculty try to ensure that everyone knows about and concurs with medication changes, including outside providers and family members.
Patients that are presented at IMPROVE can be particularly challenging, and there may be a psychological benefit to working with a team to develop a new care plan. Providers are able to get input and look at the patient in a new light.
Results of postvisit patient satisfaction questionnaires are encouraging and result in a high level of patient satisfaction and perception of clinical benefit. Patients identify an improvement in the understanding of their medications, feel they are able to safely decrease their medications, and are interested in participating again.
IMPROVE expands the prevention and treatment options for populations at risk of hospitalization and adverse outcomes from medication complications, such as AEs and drug-drug or drug-disease interactions. Embedding the polypharmacy clinic within the primary care setting rather than in a separate specialty clinic results in an increased likelihood of implementation of pharmacist and geriatrician recommendations for polypharmacy and allows for direct interprofessional education and collaboration.
Use of risk scores and pharmacist follow-up could reduce bleeding risk in patients on anticoagulation therapy.
This quality improvement project used an educational brochure to help older veterans reduce their benzodiazepine use.
There was no difference identified in the rate of falls immediately prior to and following initiation of ergocalciferol 50,000 IU self-...