Abstract
BackgroundTo reduce the occurrence of inappropriate prescription in primary care through the introduction of a cloud-based pre-prescription review system. ObjectiveWe aimed to describe the implementation of a cloud-based pre-prescription review system in the pharmacy practice of Chinese community health centers (CHCs), which currently have few qualified pharmacists. Practice descriptionThe cloud-based pre-prescription review system featured reviews by remote clinical pharmacists and targeted the prevention of inappropriate prescription in primary care. Practice innovationThis study describes the implementation of remote pharmacy at 22 CHCs in Futian District, Shenzhen, China. A pre-prescription system was developed and deployed in the cloud, which is linked to CHCs, and a consortium of qualified clinical pharmacists located in tertiary hospital. All prescriptions were mandatorily reviewed before printing and payment. First, prescriptions were reviewed using cloud-based rational drug use software. Then any detected potentially inappropriate prescriptions were reviewed by the remote pharmacist. The pharmacist consortium also modified review rules to improve efficiency and accuracy. Evaluation methodsThe frequency and proportions of potentially inappropriate prescriptions identified by the review software and the remote pharmacist consortium were analyzed descriptively. ResultsDuring the 6-month study period (July 1, 2019-December 31, 2019), 340,117 prescription entries from general practitioners in 22 community health care centers were reviewed. Of these, 6479 (3.0%) unique potential entries were suspended for pharmacist review, of which 3230 (49.9%) needed correction from prescribers in the CHCs. The most common corrections were related to improper administration routes or drug-drug interactions or had no justified indications. ConclusionInappropriate prescription is not uncommon in CHCs. The cloud-based prescription prereview model proposed in this study can serve as an important tool for the prevention of inappropriate prescription in primary care. The pre-prescription review system also provided opportunities for pharmacists to participate in the enhancement of patient care in primary care.
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