Three SOPs-correct surgery, medication reconciliation, concentrated injectable medicines-have been developed and are being implemented and evaluated in multiple hospitals in seven participating countries. Nearly 5 years into the implementation, it is clear that this is just the beginning of what can be seen as an exercise in behavior management, asking whether health care workers can adapt their behaviors and environments to standardize care processes in widely varying hospital settings.
A pharmacist-led multidisciplinary process was successfully developed and implemented within the hospital setting to increase overall antithrombotic use. Having addressed some of the known barriers and limitations to warfarin use, these algorithms may allow allied health workers, patients, and clinicians to work collaboratively to achieve optimal and, importantly, appropriate (i.e., safe and effective) antithrombotic use in at-risk elderly patients.
Objective: To identify the views of health professionals, patients and their carers on strategies to improve the use and management of warfarin in older patients with atrial fibrillation. Design: Qualitative study based on analysis of group interviews. Setting: A major metropolitan teaching hospital, from 1 March to 30 April 2003. Participants: 14 patients (у 65 years) with established atrial fibrillation and taking warfarin, three carers, 12 specialists, eight general practitioners, six community pharmacists, nine hospital pharmacists, and 11 nurses volunteered in response to flyers promoting the study. Results: Suggested strategies to improve warfarin management targeted support services for GPs and patients. Hospital-based clinicians felt that dissemination of trial evidence to GPs to support treatment recommendations is required, and that GPs need to enlist allied health professionals in the management of patients taking warfarin. GPs preferred access to practical advice from expert colleagues on the day-to-day management. Patients requested more information about warfarin therapy, as access to information is inadequate, particularly from primary sources (GPs, community pharmacists). Verbal and written information are equally important, but a single counselling session or supply of a booklet was viewed as inadequate. Participants identified various interventions for all levels of warfarin management; from the collective input, a framework for management strategies was developed. Conclusions: Health professionals and patients require more customised information MJA 2007; 186: 175-180 to support warfarin use and management.
Aim of study:To investigate the use of antithrombotic therapy in elderly patients with atrial fibrillation (AF). Methods: Data were collected retrospectively from the medical records of 262 AF patients 265 years, who were admitted to a Sydney teaching hospital over a 12-month period. Results: Overall, 202 (79%) patients were discharged on some antithrombotic therapy. Patients 280 years were as likely to receive antithrombotic therapy as those c80 years (75.8% versus 81.9%, P=0.23), but a significantly lower proportion received warfarin than did those 4 0 years (25.5% versus 62.5%, Pc0.0001). Definite contraindications to anticoagulation were a significant influence on antithrombotic agent selection (P=0.04), but multivariate analysis indicated that 'old age' was the largest contributing factor: patients 280 years were 5.46 times more likely to receive aspirin in preference to warfarin than their younger counterparts (P
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