Readmission to a hospital shortly after discharge is a common and costly problem. In the United States patients with a diagnosis of heart failure currently experience an elevated 30 day readmission rate of approximately 20%. By providing patients with medication related counseling at discharge by a pharmacist, home medications at discharge, and seeing the patient again in a pharmacist-run Medication Therapy Management (MTM) clinic 7 days after discharge, the study anticipates achieving its primary goal of showing a reduction in the readmission rate. Secondary goals are: 1) to determine patients understanding of the medication they are taking, 2) to evaluate satisfaction with the comprehensive discharge counseling service, and 3) determine the number of interventions made and benefit of the MTM clinic.
The active arm of this study (medication related hospital discharge counseling by a pharmacist, home medications, and 7 day follow-up visit at a pharmacist run MTM clinic) is available to all subjects. To study the primary goal of reducing the 30 day readmission rate the data obtained from the active arm subjects will be compared to a match group of hospitalized patients that were previously discharged with a diagnosis of heart failure. The data for all secondary study goals will be obtained directly from the active arm subjects.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
1
Patient will be educated about proper dosing instructions, potential side effects, and when to recontact the treating physician office.
Patient will be provided with medication to take home, when needed.
This comprehensive Medication Therapy Management clinic follow-up visit is scheduled for 7 days post hospital discharge. The approximately 1 hour visit is scheduled with a pharmacist to review current drug therapy and make recommendations, if needed, to improve medication utilization.
Providence Centralia Hospital
Centralia, Washington, United States
Providence St. Peter Hospital
Olympia, Washington, United States
Reduction in hospital readmissions
The readmission rate for the 50 subjects involved in this study will be compared to an equal number patients retrospectively reviewed from a 2011 patient list and matched for heart failure severity. The primary outcome will based on a comparison of the ratio of patients readmitted to the hospital before the discharge instruction program started and after.
Time frame: 30 day
Patient assessment of home medications knowledge at time of hospital discharge
Post hospital discharge the subject are asked to rate their knowledge regarding the medication they are taking at home on a scale of 1 to 10. The data obtained in this study will be compared to the same data and patient matched population obtained in 2011.
Time frame: 3 days
Patient satisfaction with comprehensive discharge counseling service.
The satisfaction survey consists of five interview questions, where the subject subjectively scores each question on a scale of 1 to 10, developed specifically for this study.
Time frame: 7 Days
Number of interventions made at the MTM clinic.
The number of drug related therapy interventions the pharmacist makes during the 7 day follow-up visit will be counted. Interventions may include: identifying: an inappropriate drug, inappropriate dose, duplication of medications, or a missing medication to optimize drug therapy.
Time frame: 7 Days.
Types of interventions made at the MTM clinic.
The types of intervention the pharmacist may work on during the 7 day follow-up visit include inappropriate drug, inappropriate dose, duplication of medications, missing medication to optimize drug therapy. Other types of interventions may be revealed during this study.
Time frame: 7 days
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.