Abstract

Despite growing interest in understanding the challenges faced by multidisciplinary health teams during the COVID-19 pandemic, there is a lack of studies specifically focusing on changes in pharmacist interventions and drug-related problems. To analyze and compare the interventions performed by pharmacists during comprehensive medication management in the adult intensive care unit and general internal medicine ward of the University Hospital of the University of São Paulo, Brazil, for defined periods before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and during the pandemic itself. All pharmacist interventions performed in relation to inpatient prescriptions from March to December 2019 (before the pandemic) and from March to December 2021 (during the pandemic) were collected and tabulated. These interventions were then classified according to the Pharmaceutical Care Network Europe (PCNE) system, version 9.1, and categorized based on first-level codes of the Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical classification system. The analysis revealed substantial changes in the patterns of pharmacist interventions and the therapeutic classes of drugs for COVID-19-positive and COVID-19-negative patients during the pandemic relative to patients in the pre-pandemic period. Among COVID-19-positive patients, interventions were predominantly related to enhancing patient safety (PCNE code P2), drug selection (C1), dose selection (C3), prescribing and dispensing processes (C5), the drug-use process (C6), and patient transfers between different levels of care (C8). The drug-related problems addressed by pharmacist interventions primarily involved COVID-19-positive patients in the pandemic period and were related to systemic hormonal preparations (excluding sex hormones and insulins), anti-infective agents for systemic use, nervous system and drugs for the blood and blood-forming organs. The results of this study highlight the adaptability and competence of pharmacists in responding to critical scenarios such as the COVID-19 pandemic. These scenarios are characterized by new work dynamics, the hiring of additional professionals, an increase in the number of beds, the rapid evolution of evidence-based information, and drug shortages that necessitate the use of alternative medications. Pharmacists play a crucial role in ensuring patient safety during these difficult times.

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