Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess prescriber acceptance of pharmacist-written recommendations and to identify areas of improvement for implementing and tracking pharmacist-written reviews.DESIGN: Phase one was a retrospective study to evaluate prescriber acceptance of pharmacist-written recommendations. Phase two consisted of the distribution of a brief anonymous survey for prescribers to provide input on preferences for pharmacist-written recommendations.SETTING: Patients receiving Home-Based Primary Care (HBPC) services at VA Connecticut Healthcare System. PARTICIPANTS: Fifty veterans admitted to the HBPC program from January 2019 to April 2019 with at least 3 months of follow-up per patient.MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: The primary outcome was the prescriber acceptance rate of HBPC pharmacistwritten recommendations.RESULTS: Out of 194 total pharmacist-written recommendations documented, 40.2% were accepted by providers. Specialty providers accepted a higher percentage of recommendations than primary care providers. Recommendations had a higher acceptance rate when both an attending provider and trainee were alerted (63.0%) versus an attending alone (36.1%). The anonymous survey concluded the majority of providers appreciate short, direct, clinically relevant summary recommendations.CONCLUSION: Overall, approximately 40% of the pharmacist-written recommendations were accepted and 66.7% were appropriately tracked, demonstrating there are opportunities for improvement. Formulating short, focused, and direct recommendations as well as ensuring to alert both attendings and trainees when indicated may optimize acceptance rates. Further research with a larger sample size is still needed to assess the barriers to prescriber acceptance of pharmacist-written recommendations.

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