Abstract

Pharmacist participation in the medical team is expected in dementia care. We investigated the use of rivastigmine, the intervention of pharmacists for its proper use, and its effects. The number of prescription proposals from the dementia care team pharmacist to the doctor was 87, and the number of acceptances was 57. The content of the proposal was 31/52 for additions/changes (number of acceptances/number of proposals), 21/28 for dose increase, 3/4 for discontinuation of administration, 2/2 for usage changes, and 1/1 for others. In increasing the dose, the number of patients who increased the maintenance dose to 18 mg was significantly higher in the group with the intervention of the pharmacist in the dementia care team than in the group without the intervention (3/12 cases vs. 0/24 cases, p = 0.031). The dose of the brought-in drug also significantly increased with pharmacist intervention compared with that in the non-intervention group (7/12 cases vs. 1/24 cases, p <0.001). The pharmacists of the dementia care team often intervened in the proper use of rivastigmine, which was found to be effective when increasing the dose. Thus, we believe that the active participation of pharmacists is necessary in dementia medication.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call