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Andrew M. Peterson, PharmD, PhD Dean, Mayes College of Healthcare Business and Policy University of the Sciences Prescribing Practices

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Prescribing Practices. Andrew M. Peterson, PharmD, PhD Dean, Mayes College of Healthcare Business and Policy University of the Sciences. Presentation Format . Case-based approach Topics Medication Compliance Medication Errors Underlying theme - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Prescribing Practices

Andrew M. Peterson, PharmD, PhDDean, Mayes College of Healthcare

Business and PolicyUniversity of the Sciences

Prescribing Practices

Page 2: Prescribing Practices

Presentation Format

• Case-based approach• Topics

– Medication Compliance– Medication Errors– Underlying theme

• Identify trends in laws and regulations that can impact your prescribing practice

• Describe emerging technologies and how they are influencing the medication use process

Page 3: Prescribing Practices

Medication Compliance Objectives• Differentiate among the concepts of

medication adherence, compliance and persistence

• Identify four predictors of medication compliance

• Articulate three reasons for medication non-compliance specific to the elderly

• Given a specific case, identify at least two strategies to improve medication compliance

Page 4: Prescribing Practices

Medication Compliance• Non- compliance to medical therapy is a major threat

to public health in the United States• Non- compliance to prescribed medication costs

nearly 125,000 lives per year. • 10% of hospital and 23% of nursing home admissions

are linked to compliance.• $300 billion annually• 1/3 of all prescriptions NOT picked up

– Non- compliance to pharmacotherapy is estimated to be 50% overall• wide ranges reported in the literature for different

disease states (30-70%)Sources: Noncompliance with Medication Regimens. An Economic Tragedy. Emerging Issues in Pharmaceutical Cost Containing. Washington, DC.

National Pharmaceutical Council. 1992;1-16.; Luscher TF. Vetter W. Adherence to medication. Journal of Human Hypertension. 4 Suppl 1:43-6, 1990 Feb; McGhan WF, Peterson AM. Pharmacoeconomic impact of patient noncompliance. IMPACT – US Pharmacist. October 2001.

Page 5: Prescribing Practices

Case Description

Page 6: Prescribing Practices

Definitions• Compliance

– the extent to which patients are obedient and follow the instructions of a health care professional1

• Adherence– the extent to which a person’s behavior – taking

medication, following a diet, and/or executing lifestyle changes corresponds with agreed upon recommendations from a health care provider2

• Persistence– how long a patient remains on therapy,

introducing length of treatment as a factor

Sources: 1. Meichenbaum D, Turk DC. Facilitating Treatment Adherence: A Practitioner’s Guidebook. Boston: Plenum Press; 1987: 20, 52, 26-29; 2. World Health Organization. Adherence to long term therapies: evidence for action. 2003. www.who.int/chronic_conditions/adherencereport/en. Viewed Nov 2003.

Page 7: Prescribing Practices

Measuring Compliance• Objective Measures

– Direct• Blood levels

– Indirect• Pill Counts

– Manual, Electronic• Pharmacy Refill Data• Health Outcomes

• Subjective Measures– Patient self reports– Practitioner reports

Page 8: Prescribing Practices

Variables Potentially Related to Compliance• Patient variables

– Patient characteristics– Diagnosis/symptoms/severity– Knowledge/Health Beliefs

• Treatment variables– Treatment complexity – Dosing – Adverse effects

• Relationship variables– Inadequate communication/poor rapport– Method of teaching/environment– Follow-up/assessment

Adapted from: Meichenbaum D, Turk DC. Facilitating Treatment Adherence: A Practitioner’s Guidebook. Boston: Plenum Press; 1987: 20, 52, 26-29.

Page 9: Prescribing Practices

Patient Characteristics• Age1

– Elderly – average compliance is 45%– Adolescents – 40-60%– Pediatrics patients (parent as caregiver) – 34-82%

• Sex2,3

– Kidney transplant patients, Dunn et al found that men were significantly more noncompliant than women.

– In contrast, Schweizer et al found no significant differences in compliance due to gender in more than 600 transplant recipients

Race

Intelligence

EducationSources: 1. Meichenbaum D, Turk DC. Facilitating Treatment Adherence: A Practitioner’s Guidebook. Boston: Plenum Press; 1987: 20, 52, 26-29. 2. Dunn J, Golden D, Van Buren CT, Lewis RM, Lawen J, Kahan BD Causes of graft loss beyond two years in the cyclosporine era. Transplantation. 1990;49:349-353. 3. Schweizer RT, Rovelli M, Palmeri D, Vossler E, Hull D, Bartus S. Noncompliance in organ transplant recipients. Transplantation. 1990;49;374-377.

Page 10: Prescribing Practices

Compliance Rates by DiagnosisCondition Reported Rates of non-

compliance

Arthritis 55-71%Asthma 20%Diabetes 40-50%Epilepsy 30-50%Hypertension 40%Schizophrenia 41%

Source: Noncompliance with Medication Regimens. An Economic Tragedy. Emerging Issues in Pharmaceutical Cost Containing. Washington, DC. National Pharmaceutical Council. 1992;1-16.

Page 11: Prescribing Practices

Health Beliefs and Compliance

• 77% of patients compliant when curing a disease

• 63% of patients compliant when preventing a disease

• Over extended periods of time, compliance rates dropped dramatically to approximately 50% for either prevention or cure

Sackett DL, Snow JC. The magnitude of compliance and noncompliance. In: Haynes NRB, Taylor DW, Sackett DL, eds. Compliance in Healthcare. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press; 1979:11-22.

Page 12: Prescribing Practices

Predictors of Compliance

• Questions to ask your patient– Do you ever forget to take your medicine?– Are you careless at times about taking your

medicine?– When you feel better do you sometimes stop

taking your medicine?– Sometimes if you feel worse when you take the

medicine, do you stop taking it?• Moriskey et al:

– 75% with high scores had BP under control at year 2 (p<0.01)

– α=0.61Morisky DE. Green LW. Levine DM. Concurrent and predictive validity of a self-reported measure of medication adherence. Medical Care. 1986:24:67-74.

Page 13: Prescribing Practices

Compliance Predictability by Variable Variables Utility as a

Predictor Explanation

• Patient demographics (age, sex, race, socio-economic status)

Weak

Literature lacks consensusUsefulness depends on therapeutic area and patient population

• Patient/provider relationship

• Regimen characteristics

• Patient health services use

ModerateGeneral consensus in literatureEffect may vary by therapeutic area and population

• Time since initiation• Medication compliance

historyStrong Always the strongest predictors

and easy to measure

Adapted from Benner J. ISPOR 2007

Page 14: Prescribing Practices

Factors Affecting Elderly Compliance

• Cognitive Ability• Prospective Memory Changes• Functional Literacy

Page 15: Prescribing Practices

Cognitive Impairment Predicts Noncompliance• STUDY

– 220 Japanese community dwelling elders– MMSE scores estimated impairment– Pill counts as compliance– Logistic regression to determine predictors of non-

compliance• Variables: Age, sex, eyesight, hearing, number of drugs,

frequency, packaging, medication calendar, drug knowledge and cognitive ability

• RESULTS– Average age: 75.7 years– 27% MMSE ≤23 (impaired)– 34.6% noncompliant– Odds Ratio

• Cognitive Impairment – 2.94 (1.32-6.58)

Okuno et al, 2001 – Eur J Clin Pharmacol

Page 16: Prescribing Practices

Prospective Memory Changes Affect Compliance• Cognitive performance declines with age

– Korten et al, 1997 – Psych Med• Decline not seen in language, visio-spatial ability or

abstract reasoning– Small et al, 1999 – Neurology

• Difficulty with prospective memory increases with additional tasks

– Martin, 2001 – Int J Behavioral Development• Poor memory performance amplified when

executive function required– D’Yewalle, 2001 – Am J Psychology

• Difficulty still exists even when task was habitual– Einstein, 2001 – Psychol Science

Page 17: Prescribing Practices

Basic Question…

“Did I take it today or do I think I took it because I have been for the past x years?”

Page 18: Prescribing Practices

Compensation for Memory Changes

Page 19: Prescribing Practices

Omitting/Repeating Doses

• Unintentionally omitting or repeating a dose

• Small interruptions to routines– phone call, doorbell

• Larger interruptions to routines– Shopping, dining out

• Intentionally omitting doses

Page 20: Prescribing Practices

Compensation for Memory Changes

Boron JB, et al. Medication adherence strategies in older adults. Proceedings of human factors and ergonomics society – 50th annual meeting; 2006.

• Association• Location• Mental Planning• Pain• Physical Reminder• Pill Box• Visibility

Page 21: Prescribing Practices

Functional Literacy

• Physical Challenges• Eyesight changes• Manual dexterity

• Cognitive Challenges• Dose selection• Understanding directions• Drug / disease knowledge

• System Challenges• Readability of pharmacy labels• Dosage form (inhaler, injectable)

Medication Management Skills

Page 22: Prescribing Practices

Medication Management Skills

• DRUGS (Drug Regimen Unassisted Grading Scale)– Identify medication – Open container– Remove appropriate dosage– Demonstrate appropriate timing

• Correlated to medication compliance

Page 23: Prescribing Practices

Identifying the Medication

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Opening the Med and Removing Appropriate Dosage

Page 27: Prescribing Practices

Education Level

<6 7-8 >9

59% 67% 84% ‡

6% 50% 78% *

0% 5% 14% *

* p<.0001, ‡ p<.05;

Comprehension of Warning Labels Increase with Literacy Level

Data: Davis TC. LSU Health Science Center, Shreveport, LO.

Page 28: Prescribing Practices

Davis, T. C. et. al. Ann Intern Med 2006;145:887-894

Demonstrating Appropriate Timing

Page 29: Prescribing Practices

Medication Management Skills

• DRUGS (Drug Regimen Unassisted Grading Scale)– Identify medication – Open container– Remove appropriate dosage– Demonstrate appropriate timing

• Correlated to medication compliance

Page 30: Prescribing Practices

Case Description

Page 31: Prescribing Practices

Medication Errors Objectives

• Define the nature and significance of medication errors

• Describe two types of medication errors and opportunities to improve systems and prevent errors

• Given a specific case, identify at least two strategies to prevent a medication error from occurring

Page 32: Prescribing Practices

Case Description

Page 33: Prescribing Practices

Definitions

Error - The failure of a planned action to be completed as intended or the use of a wrong plan to achieve the aim

Adverse Event - An injury caused by medical management rather than the underlying condition

Preventable Adverse Event - An adverse event attributable to an error

VHA Medication Safety Report: 2004

Page 34: Prescribing Practices
Page 35: Prescribing Practices

Statistics On Medication Errors

• 44,000 to 98,000 Americans die from medical errors each year

• 7,000 die from medication errors alone

• 20 to 28% of adverse drug events are preventable

• Cost per error is $2,013 to $4,700 per admission

Page 36: Prescribing Practices

Preventing Medication Errors

• Consumer Actions to Enhance Medication Safety

• Issues for Discussion with Patients by Providers

• e-prescribing by 2010• Drug naming, labeling and

packaging• Oversight and regulation

Page 37: Prescribing Practices

Medication Error• Bates: “Any error occurring in the medication use

process.” • NCCMERP “Any preventable event that may

cause or lead to inappropriate medication use or patient harm, while the medication is in the control of the health care professional, patient, or consumer.”– related to professional practice systems including:

• Prescribing/order communication• Product labeling, packaging and nomenclature• Compounding/dispensing/distribution• Administration/education/monitoring and use

Page 38: Prescribing Practices
Page 39: Prescribing Practices

High Alert Medications• High alert drugs are drugs that bear a

heightened risk of causing significant patient harm when they are used in error. (ISMP.org; accessed Nov 6, 2009)

• ISMP suggestions to reduce risk:– improving access to information about these drugs– limiting access to high-alert medications– using auxiliary labels and automated alerts; – standardizing the ordering, storage, preparation,

and administration– employing redundancies such as automated or

independent double checks when necessary.

Page 40: Prescribing Practices

High Alert Medications• Anticoagulants (warfarin, heparin & LMWH)

– Current TJC National Patient Safety Goal• Chemotherapy• Pediatric medications• Parenteral narcotics (opiates)• Insulin• Magnesium sulfate• Potassium chloride injection concentrate• Neuromuscular blockers• Vasoactive substances

Page 41: Prescribing Practices

Medication Safety:Opportunities for Improvement• Selection and procurement• Storage• Prescribing• Dispensing• Administration / Counseling• Monitoring

System vs Knowledge vs Competent?

Page 42: Prescribing Practices

Look-Alike/Sound Alike:Error Prevention• Education: Information from the

literature• Tall Man Lettering:

– NovoLOG and NovoLIN – oxyCODONE and OxyCONTIN– ceFAZolin and cefTRIAXONE– FLUoxetine and DULOXetine.

• Tall Man lettering on medication labels, shelving labels, medication records, etc.

Page 43: Prescribing Practices
Page 44: Prescribing Practices

Drug Administration Technology

• Automated medication cabinets– Pyxis, OmniCell– Interfaced with pharmacy profiles

• Pharmacy generated MARs• Smart pumps

– Drug library with standard concentrations– Defines soft and hard administration limits

• Bedside barcode administration system

Page 45: Prescribing Practices
Page 46: Prescribing Practices

Medication Reconciliation• Avoid errors such as omission, duplication,

dosing errors or drug interactions• Each transition of care• Five steps

– Develop list of previous meds– List of newly prescribed meds– Compare the lists– Respond to differences– New list to care-givers and patient

Page 47: Prescribing Practices

Ideal Medication Error Prevention Program

• Addresses all components of the medication use process

• Uses an interdisciplinary approach to resolving problems

• Involves all levels of employees, practitioners and administration

• Identifies and addresses underlying causes• Supports system improvements, reduces risk, and

improves patient outcomes

Page 48: Prescribing Practices

Case Description

Page 49: Prescribing Practices

Key Issues to Remember

• People will make mistakes• Mistakes are opportunities to learn

where the process is broken• Effective change requires all

stakeholders’ participation

Page 50: Prescribing Practices

Conclusion