Abstract

Workforce reform has placed a significant focus on the role of non-medical prescribers in the healthcare system. Pharmacists are trained in pharmacology and therapeutics, and therefore well placed to act as non-medical prescribers. To assess the safety and accuracy of inpatient medication charts within a pharmacist collaborative prescribing model (intervention), compared to the usual medical model (control) in the emergency department (ED). Another objective compared venous thromboembolism (VTE) risk assessment and prescribing, between intervention and control groups. Adult patients in ED referred for hospital admission were randomised into control or intervention by a block randomisation method, until the required sample size was reached. Medication charts were audited retrospectively by an independent auditor, using validated audit forms. Intervention group medication charts contained significantly fewer prescribing errors, omissions and discrepancies compared to the control group, and improved documentation of adverse drug reactions. VTE risk assessment and prescribing had higher guideline concordance in the intervention group compared to the control group. This collaborative prescribing trial showed excellent results in safety and accuracy of pharmacist prescribing when compared to the usual medical model of prescribing. The admitting medical practitioner and extended scope pharmacist prescriber worked as a collaborative team in emergency, which improved Australian national prescribing safety indicators.

Full Text
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