Abstract

Hospital internal-use pharmacies are required to make pharmaceutical preparations in order to obtain a medication in a dosage and/or Galenic form (FG) suitable for pediatric use. The aim of this study is to assess the procedures for continuing pharmaceutical preparations initiated within the Assistance Publique des Hôpitaux de Marseille in an outpatient setting. Hospital discharge prescriptions and/or consultation prescriptions involving paediatric magistral preparations and issued by our Hospital Centre were collected from two pharmacies with significant preparation activity at national level. An analysis of regulatory compliance was carried out, as well as a comparison of the formulation of preparations made in the outpatient setting and in the hospital. Au total, 45 prescriptions were collected, representing 52 preparation lines. The regulatory analysis revealed that all the prescriptions contained at least one non-conformity, 60.8% of which related to drug treatments. The prepared FG differed in the outpatient setting compared to the hospital in 46.2% of cases, and in 56% of cases, the vehicle and concentration of the active ingredient used differed when the FG was a liquid oral form. The lack of clear and complete hospital prescriptions makes it difficult to carry out treatment initiated in hospital in the outpatient setting. The multiplicity of information systems between hospitals and outpatient settings are obstacles to the interoperability needed to coordinate patient treatment, particularly in paediatrics. The quality of discharge prescriptions needs to be improved to optimise the patient care pathway.

Full Text
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