The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if a multi-professional (conducted by geriatricians, clinical pharmacists, nurses) medication revision, centered on patients' goals and characteristics, can improve treatment adequacy in older adults admitted to an intermediate care hospital. The main question it aims to answer is: does this approach reduce the average number of medications taken per patient? Researchers will compare this multi-professional patient-centered revision to the usual standard of care (treatment revision conducted by a clinical pharmacist) to see if the patient-centered revision works in improving treatment adequacy. Participants admitted to an intermediate care hospital will undergo a comprehensive assessment by a geriatrician, and a medication revision (conducted by a multidisciplinary team or a clinical-pharmacist alone). They will also be asked to fulfill some questionnaires on their health status and attitudes. Any possible adverse events to the medications will be recorded at discharge. Participants will be contacted again three months after discharge to check for any readmission or death.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
300
Patient-centered multidisciplinary treatment review is defined as a medication review conducted by a multidisciplinary team (geriatrician, clinical pharmacist, nurse) according to a patient-centered methodology, based on person-centered evaluation of both personal and clinical insights, diagnostic-centered evaluation (based on current guidelines), and drug-centered evaluation (based on adequacy)
Parc Sanitari Pere Virgili
Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
RECRUITINGNumber of drugs
Median number of drugs per patient
Time frame: Baseline and after discharge, an average of 30 days
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