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EVALUATION STUDIES
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Improving posthospital medication management in a Danish municipality: A process evaluation.
Journal of Clinical Nursing 2018 October
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To evaluate an intervention developed to improve patient safety in posthospital medication management carried out by visiting nurses working in a municipality in Denmark. The intervention consisted of three elements: an initial interdisciplinary home visit by nurses, two subsequent scheduled visits and the use of an organising tool.
BACKGROUND: As a consequence of specialised treatment plans and new treatment possibilities, patients with complex care needs can now be discharged from hospital more rapidly-and in greater numbers-than previously. Medication management is identified as the most challenging component of a discharge from the hospital to the home, in which discrepancies have been found in up to 94% of medication lists.
DESIGN: A process evaluation inspired by the UK Medical Research Council's guidance.
METHODS: The process evaluation was conducted for three months in a visiting nurses' department. Data consisted of visiting nurses' self-reports of performance of the intervention and group interviews (n = 4) with visiting nurses (n = 14). Self-reports were analysed to evaluate implementation performance and elaborated with interview data to illuminate mechanisms of impact and contextual factors.
RESULTS: The implementation of the intervention highlighted the importance of the nurse-patient relationship, nursing assessment and logistics, and professional values in posthospital medication management. Complex care needs were a mediator in the high implementation rate, which involved 31 of the 38 patients in the target group.
CONCLUSION: For patients with complex care needs, posthospital medication management may be improved by a reconsideration of the activity-based funding of home health care, a recognition of the importance of organising work and a critical consideration of standard systems.
RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: An increase in the number of patients with complex care needs in home health care is an international issue that affects many healthcare systems. This study points at contextual challenges and possible methods for facilitating the future development of posthospital care for these patients.
BACKGROUND: As a consequence of specialised treatment plans and new treatment possibilities, patients with complex care needs can now be discharged from hospital more rapidly-and in greater numbers-than previously. Medication management is identified as the most challenging component of a discharge from the hospital to the home, in which discrepancies have been found in up to 94% of medication lists.
DESIGN: A process evaluation inspired by the UK Medical Research Council's guidance.
METHODS: The process evaluation was conducted for three months in a visiting nurses' department. Data consisted of visiting nurses' self-reports of performance of the intervention and group interviews (n = 4) with visiting nurses (n = 14). Self-reports were analysed to evaluate implementation performance and elaborated with interview data to illuminate mechanisms of impact and contextual factors.
RESULTS: The implementation of the intervention highlighted the importance of the nurse-patient relationship, nursing assessment and logistics, and professional values in posthospital medication management. Complex care needs were a mediator in the high implementation rate, which involved 31 of the 38 patients in the target group.
CONCLUSION: For patients with complex care needs, posthospital medication management may be improved by a reconsideration of the activity-based funding of home health care, a recognition of the importance of organising work and a critical consideration of standard systems.
RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: An increase in the number of patients with complex care needs in home health care is an international issue that affects many healthcare systems. This study points at contextual challenges and possible methods for facilitating the future development of posthospital care for these patients.
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