社区药房骨质疏松症药物管理服务的评估:一项队列研究

IF 1.8 Q3 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:骨质疏松症的有效治疗因患者对药物治疗的依从性差和缺乏持久性而受到阻碍。可以设计干预措施来激发和解决患者对副作用的担忧,并促进自我管理。研究目的目的是利用客观和主观的依从性测量方法,开发和评估基于社区药房的药物管理干预措施对患者坚持骨质疏松症药物治疗的影响。次要目的是报告转诊至全科医生(GP)寻求骨质疏松症管理帮助的患者比例,并衡量患者对该服务的体验。研究方法本研究采用队列设计。获得了社区药房的配药数据,作为衡量患者是否坚持用药的客观指标。此外,还收集了患者自我报告的用药信念(用药信念问卷)和自我报告的依从性(用药依从性报告量表 5)。收集并比较了基线、干预后 4 周和终点(干预后约一年)的数据。此外,还对各项指标之间的相关性进行了分析。此外,还获得了全科医生转诊比例和服务质量感知量表(pSQS-SF6)。结果招募并培训了 26 家澳大利亚社区药房的药剂师和辅助人员来实施这项服务,并招募了 107 名患者。其中 71 人在 4 周后接受了研究小组的随访,54 人在终点接受了随访。事后分析发现,客观或自我报告的依从性衡量标准均未发生变化。与基线相比,患者在4周时和研究终点时对骨质疏松症药物的担忧程度较低。到 4 周时,48.1% 的患者接受了药剂师向全科医生的转介。患者的体验评分很高(pSQS-SF6 中位数 = 6.5/7)。结论:这项研究证明了社区药房干预的潜力,社区药房干预旨在通过激发患者使用骨质疏松症药物的想法和感受,并利用动机访谈技术解决这些问题,从而优化患者的用药依从性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The evaluation of an osteoporosis medication management service in community pharmacy, a cohort study

Background: Effective treatment of osteoporosis is hindered by poor adherence and lack of persistence with medical therapy. Interventions can be designed to elicit and address patients' concerns about side effects and promote self-management. Objective(s): The aim was to develop and evaluate the impact of a community pharmacy-based medication management intervention on patients' adherence to osteoporosis medicines using both objective and subjective measures of adherence. Secondary aims were to report the proportion of patients that had been referred to their General Practitioner (GP) for assistance with osteoporosis management, and to measure patients' experiences with the service. Methods: This study used a cohort design. Community pharmacy dispensing data were obtained as an objective measure of adherence. Self-reported beliefs about medicines (Beliefs about Medicines Questionnaire) and self-reported adherence (Medication Adherence Reporting Scale 5) were also collected. Data were collected and compared between baseline, 4 weeks after intervention, and endpoint (approximately a year after intervention). Analysis of correlations between measures was also conducted. GP referral percentage and perceived service quality scale (pSQS-SF6) was obtained. Results: Pharmacists and support staff from 26 Australian community pharmacies were recruited and trained to implement the service, and 107 patients were recruited. Of these, 71 were available for follow-up interviews by research team at 4 weeks, and 54 at the endpoint. No changes were found in pre-post analysis for the objective or self-reported measures of adherence. Patients' concerns about osteoporosis medicines were lower at 4 weeks and at the study endpoint compared to baseline. Uptake of pharmacists' referrals to patients' GPs was 48.1% by 4 weeks. Patient experience was rated highly (median pSQS-SF6 = 6.5/7). Conclusions: This study demonstrates the potential of community pharmacy interventions designed to optimize medication adherence by eliciting patients' thoughts and feelings about using osteoporosis medicines and addressing them using motivational interview techniques.

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