Effects of Medication Reconciliation and Cost Avoidance Analysis by Clinical Pharmacists in a Neurocritical Care Unit
- Author:
Ui Sang CHO
1
;
Young Joo SONG
;
Young Mi JUNG
;
Kyung Suk CHOI
;
Eunsook LEE
;
Euni LEE
;
Moon Ku HAN
Author Information
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords: Intensive care units; Pharmacist; Medication reconciliation; Costs and cost analysis
- MeSH: Costs and Cost Analysis; Electronic Health Records; Humans; Intensive Care Units; Medication Reconciliation; Nutritional Support; Pharmacists; Retrospective Studies
- From: Journal of Neurocritical Care 2018;11(2):110-118
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
- Abstract: BACKGROUND: The role of clinical pharmacists in medication therapy to improve clinical and economic outcomes has been reported in the literature. This study was conducted to analyze the changes in details of medication interventions before and after the introduction of clinical pharmacists into the care of neurocritical care unit (NCU) patients, and to evaluate the economic effects of clinical pharmacists by calculating the avoidance cost. METHODS: A retrospective study was conducted reviewing the electronic medical records from June 2013 to May 2014 (before), and from June 2016 to May 2017 (after). We calculated the number and rates of intervention, the acceptance rates of it, and also reviewed the list of interventions. We calculated avoidance cost if there was no intervention. RESULTS: The monthly mean number of interventions increased from 8.0 (±5.7) to 31.7 (±12.8) (P < 0.001) and the frequency of intervention also increased from 0.8% to 1.6% (P=0.003). The most frequently provided pharmacist intervention was nutritional support before introduction of clinical pharmacists and discussions on the medication plan after. The number of classified interventions was 14 before introduction of clinical pharmacist services and 33 after. The calculated cost avoidance associated with a clinical pharmacists' integration was 77,990,615 won per year. CONCLUSION: Introduction of clinicals pharmacist into the NCU was associated with increased intervention rates and expanded types of clinical interventions. The cost avoidance achieved by the pharmacists' interventions can be further explored to evaluate if similar expansions of pharmacists' services achieve similar results in other settings.