Title: Introduction to Clinical Pharmacy
1Introduction to Clinical Pharmacy a key role for
pharmacists.Year 3 Peradeniya University SOP
- Dr Ian Coombes,
- Clinical senior Lecturer - School of Pharmacy
Medicine, University of Queensland, and Senior
Pharmacist, Safe Medication Practice
Unit, Brisbane, Australia - Mrs Judith Coombes
- Conjoint Lecturer - School of Pharmacy,
University of Queensland and Senior Education
Pharmacist, Princess Alexandra Hospital,
Brisbane, Australia.
2Content
- Introduction to Us and You
- What is clinical pharmacy and why do we need it
- Medicine management and patient journeys
- Adverse drug events the problem
- Product versus patient focused services
- Perception of the profession
- Drivers for change its development elsewhere
- Core practitioner skills, knowledge and
attitudes, - Plan for the next 6 weeks
3Background - Queensland
700 km W - E
1900km N - S
1.8Million km2
4 M people in Qld
Brisbane
4Queensland
Brisbane
5Comparisons
Sri Lanka (7 degrees N of equator) Australia (14 degrees S of equator)
66,000km2 7,600,000km2 (120x)
20 million people 20.3 million people ()
8.5 gt65 year 13.3 gt65 yr (1.5 x)
3.7 GDP on healthcare 9.5 GDP on healthcare (2.5x)
160M/ yr/ on free Health 80 BN/ yr/ Health
42 /person/year on health 3,900/person/year on health
2 hospital beds/ 1000 people 3.6 hospital beds/ 1000 people
New 4 year pharmacy degree 4 year pharmacy degree
1000 hospital pharmacists, 14,000 pharmacists, 3000 hospital
Doctor order, pharmacist supply Separation of supply from ordering
6Judith Coombes
- University Queensland
- Pre-registration (apprenticeship year) community
- District hospital (Rockhampton) 700km N
- UK hospitals 2 years, wards and dispensary
- PAH renal specialist pharmacist
- UK MSc (Clin Pharm) DI research pharmacist
- PAH, 700 bed teaching, Drug use evaluation
- Conjoint Lecturer U of Qld PAH education
7Ian Coombes
- University of London wanted be in advertising!
- Pre-registration year - London Hospital
- Junior training London Hospital
- Working holiday in Brisbane, 2 hospitals
- Msc in Clin Pharm, ICU, renal, cardiac jobs - UK
- Manage Clinical Services cardiac PAC PAH
- Safe Medication Practice Unit
- PhD
- State wide pharmacy prescriber education
8Perceptions of Pharmacists
9They just count a few tablets
10They just weigh and measure things
11A bunch of shop-keepers
12Tell me how and when to use the Medicine
13Counter-prescribing
14Not really health care practitioners
theyre businessmen
15Do you need a degree to be a pharmacist?
16Drivers for change
- Competence of health care practitioners
- - Diploma to BSc to BPharm Pre-registration
registration - - Continuing Professional Development.
- Re-engineering of community medicine supply
- - Provided by competent practitioners
- - Recognition that dispensing is a technical
function - Informed general public increased expectation
- Realisation that .
-
17Medicines are Dangerous
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19Pharmaceutical Care
A practice in which a practitioner takes
responsibility for a patients drug related needs
and holds him or herself accountable for meeting
these needs. Linda Strand 1997
20Safe drug therapy
Effective drug therapy
Aims of Pharmaceutical Care
Economic drug therapy
Improve quality of life
21A case
- 44 year old lady with fever and green sputum and
cough no known previous medical history
Diagnosed with upper resp. tract infection - Prescribed
- Co-Amoxiclav 1 tds
- Doxycycline 100mg D
- Prednisolone 40mg D
- Theophylline 200mg bd
- Omeprazole 20mg D
- Metoclopramide 10mg tds
- Salbutamol 2 puff inhale prn
Pharmaceutical problems Common organisms for
URTI? Need for atypical organism ? History of
asthma risk vs benefit? History asthma risk
vs benefit Need for acid suppression? Why is she
nauseous ? Benefit of brochodilation? Does she
know what to take? Will she take it?
22Why did you choose to do this course?
- What do you envisage doing when you become a
pharmacist? - 2 minutes talk to your neighbour and then feedback
23Question?
- Think of someone in your family or a friend that
has had something go wrong with their
medicines? - Caused an adverse or unwanted effect ?
- Had medicines stopped when should have continued?
- Not worked?
- What happened ?
- Could it have been avoided ?
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25Medical/medication errors in the UK
- Adverse events occur in 10 of admissions
- An estimated 850,000 adverse events a year
- Adverse events cost approximately 2 billion/yr
- The NHS pays 400 million clinical negligence
- Medication errors accounts for around a quarter
of the incidents which threaten patient safety - The Chief Medical Officer
- An Organisation with a Memory
- Department of Health (2000)
26High Profile Examples
- A patient with leukaemia received Intrathecal
vincristine instead of intravenously. Died
beginning of February 2001. 14th such case over
the last 16 years. - Patient being operated for a AAA received
bupivicaine intravenously rather than epidurally.
Patient died 3 days later. - A 3 year old girl, who had a convulsion post flu
vaccine. Attended hospital to get checked out.
Received nitrous oxide instead of oxygen in
casualty
27High Profile Cases (Cont.)
- Elderly lady prescribed Methotrexate in 1997 for
her rheumatoid arthritis. Dose increased to
17.5mg WEEKLY over a 6 month period. - Jan 2000 patient undergoes right TKR in hospital.
MTX given as one tablet a week (only 2.5mg). - 6th April 2000 patient asks GP to reduce number
of tablets as in hospital. - Prescription for MTX 10mg/daily written and
dispensed. - 30th April patient dies.
28Deaths from medicines in the UK1999 - 2000 (ICD9
10 data)
A spoonful of sugar - Audit Commission (2001)
29So drugs are safe ..
Photosensitivity from Amiodarone
Severe extravasation of amiodarone infusion
30NSAID or COX-2 induced peptic ulcer
31Goitre Hypothyroidism Secondary to Amiodarone
Bleeding due to anticoagulation
32Erythemal rash from penicillin in patient with
a previous Known allergy/ adverse drug reaction
33Necrotising fascititis secondary to infection
at site of IV injection
34Acute Liver failure from Black Cohosh - herbal
medicine
35Human Error(Mistakes, Slips, Lapses)
- Error is inevitable due to our limitations
- limited memory capacity
- limited mental processing capacity
- negative effects of fatigue other stressors
- We all make errors all the time
- Generalised lack of awareness that errors occur
- Patients suffer adverse events much more often
than previously realised - Errors often NOT immediately observed
36- The same error, even a minor one, can have quite
different consequences in different circumstances.
37I assumed the brown glass ampoule was
frusemide (ICU RN after injecting 10mg
adrenaline)
The System Only as safe as its designed to be!
38The Accident Causation Model(Adopted from Reason
Dean)
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40The Medicines Management Cycle
- What happens between a doctor seeing a patient
and them receiving or taking their medicine ? - 2 minutes discuss with neighbor
41The Medicines Management Cycle
DOCTORS
Decision to prescribe
Monitor response
Pharmacy
Nurses
From Bates et al 1995
42Sources of Error
- Prescribing error - selecting the wrong or
inappropriate drug/dose/formulation/duration etc - Communicating those instructions
- Supply error - timely wrong drug, dose, route
expired medicines, labelling. - Administration error - timing wrong route wrong
rate/technique. - Lack of user education - actions to take.
43Where do things go wrong with medicines?
44Comparability to Australian National Health
Priority Areas
- In 2000-01, hospital admissions
- Angina 88,500
- Myocardial infarction 37,500
- Asthma 49,000
- Diabetes 46,000
- Adverse Drug Events 140,000
45Reducing the risk of adverse events
- Always
- include a detailed drug history in the
consultation - Only
- use drug treatment when there is a clear
indication - Stop
- drugs that are no longer necessary
- Check
- dose and response, especially in the young,
elderly and those with renal, hepatic or cardiac
disease
46Pharmaceutical Care
A practice in which a practitioner takes
responsibility for a patients drug related needs
and holds him or herself accountable for meeting
these needs. Linda Strand 1997
47Safe drug therapy
Effective drug therapy
Aims of Pharmaceutical Care
Economic drug therapy
Improve quality of life
48Aims of Pharmaceutical Care
- Identify actual and potential drug related
problems, - Resolve actual drug related problems,
- Prevent potential drug related problems.
49Drug therapy assessment
Six types of problems which may result in
treatment failure
- Inappropriate selection of medication
- Inappropriate formulation of medication
- Inappropriate administration of drug therapy
- Inappropriate medication-taking behaviour
- Inappropriate monitoring of drug therapy
- Inappropriate response to drug therapy
50Pharmaceutical care planning
- Process of work
- collect relevant patient information
- assess information
- identify problems
- state desired outcomes
- prioritise problems
- develop an action plan for each problem
- was desired outcome achieved?
51Pharmaceutical Care Activities (1)
- Patient Consultation - discuss expectations and
concerns, - Pharmacists assessment - identify current or
potential drug therapy problems, - Creation of a care plan - establish goals of
therapy, action to be taken and outcomes to be
monitored. - Communication of that plan eg Dr, nurse other
pharmacist, patient, carer
52Pharmaceutical Care Activities (2)
- Patient education and/or referral
- provide individualised, current information about
drug therapy and how to use Demonstrate special
techniques refer to doctor or other HCP. - Patient monitoring and follow-up
- are the goals being met.
53- Refocusing the profession because -
- Problems caused by drug use in society,
- 2. Business orientated approaches place the
product before the patient, - Pharmaceutical care is -
- a patient-centred approach (not drug-centred),
- a process of managing drug-related problems,
- Where pharmacists take responsibility for
provision of drug therapy.
54Clinical Pharmacy Role in Reducing Risks
Admission medication history
Formulary
Prescribing protocols
Allergy check
Prospective review
Administration instructions
Clinical pharmacy
Drug distribution system
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56Outcomes of Pharmaceutical Care(1)
- The patient receives effective drug therapy -
based on the evidence of current medical
literature (Evidence based Medicine). - The patient receives safe therapy - based on a
knowledge of their individual clinical
circumstances.
57Outcomes of Pharmaceutical Care(2)
- The patient receives the most economic therapy -
not compromising efficacy or toxicity - The patient receives drug therapy desired to
improve their quality of life.
58Patient Assessment Questions
- Does the patient need this drug ?
- Is this drug the most effective and safe ?
- Is this dosage the most effective and safe ?
- If side effects are unavoidable does the patient
need additional drug therapy for these side
effects? - Will drug administration impair safety or
efficacy ? - Are there any drug interactions ?
- Will the patient comply with prescribed regimen ?
59To be a drug expert society needs practitioners
who ..
60Key knowledge, skills and attributes
- Knowledge base
- Chemistry,
- Pharmaceutics,
- Pharmacology,
- Therapeutics,
- Law, Ethics, Professional conduct.
- Skills base
- Problem solvers,
- Make decisions,
- Good communication Effective consultation
process, - Gather information,
- Calculate doses,
- Offer advice thats timely and accurate (Pts,
Drs and Nurses), - Dispense medicines,
- Monitor and follow up
61Key knowledge, skills and attributes
- Attributes
- Takes responsibility for actions
- Punctual
- Caring nature
- Professional behaviour
- Open minded
- Positive attitude
- Treats patients equally
- Treats information confidentially
62Key Responsibilities
- Act in the interest of patients and seek to
provide the best possible health care for the
community. - Treat all with courtesy, respect and
confidentiality. - Respect patients rights to participate in
decisions about their care - Provide information which can be understood.
- Must ensure that their knowledge, skills and
performance are of high quality, up to date,
evidence based and relevant. - Behave with integrity
- adhere to accepted standards of personal and
professional conduct
63Summary
- Drugs are beneficial but can also cause harm.
- Society needs a gatekeeper who manages the use of
drugs. - Pharmacists must adopt a patient focused approach
to identifying and resolving drug related issues. - The consultation process and effective
communication lies at the heart of achieving this.
64Plan for next 6 weeks
- Topics
- Abbreviations,
- Evidence based medicine
- Medication history taking, confirmation,
reconciliation - Effective communication with other clinical staff
- Therapeutic c-vasc, respiratory, renal,
neurology (pain) , gastro - Teaching and learning methods
- Didactic, set some tasks, feedback go through in
tutorials
65The End
66