Leendertse et al. 33
|
Interview by pharmacist, follow-up of plan by GP and follow-up in time by pharmacist |
Actual drug use
DRPs that involved the patient (not further defined)
|
Follow-up evaluation of the advised pharmacotherapy changes as agreed with the patient in the pharmaceutical care plan |
– |
Moderate |
Kilcup et al. 28
|
Telephone interview with pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Unexplained discrepancies
Drug related problems
|
Opportunity to ask questions on:
understanding of medication
how medication intended to work
common safety concerns
how to take medication as intended
|
– |
Moderate |
Olsson et al. 39
|
Home visit by study nurse |
Actual drug use
Compliance
|
Written drug regimen was provided to enable patient participation |
– |
Weak |
Akazawa et al. 17
|
Visit at pharmacy (brown bag method) |
Actual drug use
Reason for choosing OTCs
Adherence
Storage
|
Appropriate feedback
Potential safety issues
|
>90% had ≥1 positive responses (ease concerns on interaction or ADE or duplications, get confirmation, better understanding, others)
45% had ≥1 negative responses (tiresome to bring, time, insufficient advice, others)
|
Moderate |
Kwint et al. 30
|
Home-visit by community pharmacist |
Actual drug use
|
Not described |
– |
Strong |
Elliot et al. 19
|
Home-visit by clinical pharmacist or GP |
Actual drug use
|
Not described |
Pharmacist home visit is more feasible than by GP
Satisfied patients with home-visit
|
Strong |
Willoch et al. 50
|
Interview with standardized form during hospital stay and follow-up home visit by clinical pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Medication knowledge
Adverse drug effects
Efficacy
Post-discharge effects
|
Targeted counselling talk on medications and medication changes by pharmacist |
– |
Moderate |
Stewart et al. 47
|
Interview at care centre by (student-)pharmacist |
Actual drug use
|
Not described |
– |
Weak |
Swain 48
|
Interview at clinic by pharmacist |
Actual drug use
|
Education and counselling on medication while ensuring safety and effectiveness |
-
97% of patients was satisfied with consult
Time: interview mean 38 min
|
Moderate |
Lam 31
|
Web-cam enabled video-conferencing by pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Awareness of treatment goals
Perception of disease control and health care needs
Adherence (questionnaire)
|
Answering of questions
Patient-centred education
Medication and life style recommendations
Instructions and confirmation of understanding
|
-
All respondents agreed or strongly agreed that answers to their questions were helpful and they had better medication knowledge.
Time: interview 45–60 min
|
Moderate |
Niquille et al. 38
|
Interview at the pharmacy by community pharmacist |
Medication experiences
Medication knowledge/skills
Adherence
Attitude towards prevention
|
Not described |
– |
Weak |
Granas et al. 21
|
Interview at the pharmacy by community pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Compliance issues
|
Medication advice on paper form |
98% of patients said they benefited from the review
Time: median consultation 60 min
|
Moderate |
Hernandez et al. 24
|
Interview in hospital with standardized service questionnaire by hospital pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Adherence
Possible allergies
Adverse drug effects
|
Printed: prescription, schedule, indications, (contra-) interactions, ADE
Drugs and usage recommendations (knowledge of disease, treatment and ADE)
|
All respondents could ask (almost) all questions
All respondents rated the treatment as (very) good
Time: counselling mean 26 min |
Moderate |
Hugtenburg et al. 25
|
Counsel at home, in pharmacy or by phone by pharmacist |
Actual drug use
|
Printed: daily medication intake scheme
Counseling
|
40% of the patients mentioned a medication problem or raised questions |
Moderate |
Karapinar-Carkit et al. 27
|
Counselling at discharge by pharmaceutical consultants |
Actual drug use
Considering continuing need
Practical problems
Adverse drug effects
Forgetting of medication
|
Education |
– |
Moderate |
Pindolia et al. 41
|
Telephone contact by pharmacist and/or GP |
Actual drug use
Determine health goals
Concerns about treatment
|
Explain the drug change(s)
In-depth counselling on medications/health
Follow-up instructions (laboratory, GP visit, drugs)
|
90% found the telephone discussion convenient and were provided with the necessary education
Time: 2.5 h/patient, mainly by pharmacist
|
Strong |
Moultry et al. 34
|
Home-visit by consultant pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Medical history (self-reported)
Allergies
Adverse effects
|
Drug information (verbally and written)
Action plan
Emergency medication kit and education
|
Almost all patients were satisfied or somewhat satisfied with the service
All patient felt more knowledgeable after home visit
Time: Home visit: 15–60 min
|
Moderate |
MEDMAN 53
|
Consultation according to pharmacist-determined patient need |
Actual drug use
Compliance
Lifestyle and social support
|
Not described |
Not described |
Weak |
Nguyen et al. 37
|
Home visit 2 days after discharge by pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Medication knowledge
|
Education on medication knowledge |
In 73/98 of identified DRPs the information given by the patient was new to the GP |
Weak |
Viktil et al. 49
|
Interview at hospital by pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Medication handling (adherence, knowledge, practical, efficacy)
|
Not described |
Only 50% of intended interviews were conducted. Feasibility was difficult.
Time: Interview mean 20.3 min (range 5–60 min)
|
Moderate |
Sorensen et al. 46
|
Home visit by pharmacist and consult with GP |
Actual drug use
|
Not described |
– |
Moderate |
Griffiths et al. 22
|
Interview at unknown location by community nurse |
Actual drug use
Allergies
Side effects
|
Educational support (Medilist)
Compliance aid support.
|
– |
Moderate |
Naunton et al. 36
|
Home visit 5 days after discharge by pharmacist |
Adherence
Information to identify DRPs
|
Education (medications and compliance)
Compliance devices, when needed
|
94% were satisfied with the home visit Time: visit median 50 min |
Moderate |
Gilbert et al. 20
|
Home visit by community pharmacist and follow-up by GP |
Actual drug use
Knowledge on medication
Demonstration of administration devices
|
Dosing instructions
Education
Assisted with dose administration
Informed choice is mentioned
|
In 31 cases the patient refused to follow-up the advice on which the GP and pharmacist agreed upon
|
Moderate |
Zermansky et al. 51
|
Home visit community pharmacist and follow-up by GP |
Actual drug use
Confirm indications still valid
Adherence
Unadressed problems
|
Not described, however negotiation with the patient is mentioned in the methods |
Time: mean 20 min for pharmacist
|
Strong |
Jameson et al. 26
|
1. telephone questionnaire 2. Interview in GP office by GP 3. Counselling by GP |
Actual drug use
Understanding of medication
|
Explain drug changes
Counselling or instructions on medication and lifestyle, when needed
|
70% of consult group patients said that they benefited from the consultTime: Face-to-face interviews: 45–60 min
|
Strong |
Krska et al. 29
|
Home visit by pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Effectiveness
|
Not described |
– |
Moderate |
Sellors et al. 44
|
Interview at GP office by pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Adherence (questionnaire)
|
Not described |
– |
Moderate |
Grymonpre et al. 23
|
Home visit by trained staff or volunteers Patient counselling by physician |
Actual drug use
Daily routine
Adherence
Adverse drug events
Allergies and intolerances
Other possible DRPs
|
Counselling with written information with physician at practice or at home
Follow-up with pharmacist at home to identify and resolve new issues.
|
– |
Moderate |
Schneider et al. 43
|
Home visit by community pharmacist |
Actual drug use
Medication knowledge
Medication management and adherence (incl. hoarding)
Adverse drug effects
Practical problems
|
When needed, advice on medication and follow-up visit |
From qualitative interviews several benefits were identified for patients, GPs and pharmacists due to the home visits
Time: Home visit mean 56 min.
|
Moderate |