Reference
Patel, P., Campbell, P., Moslem, M., Spriggel, P., & Warholak, T. (2015). Identifying Drug Therapy Problems Through Patient Consultation at Community Pharmacies: A Quality Improvement Project. https://doi.org/10.1097/PTS.0000000000000228
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to identify drug therapy problems during patient counseling at prescription pickup in the community pharmacy setting.
METHODS: This descriptive quality improvement project assessed the number of drug therapy problems identified during patient consultation. Data were collected for 2 months at 6 community pharmacies in Arizona. The criterion for inclusion was any patient new or transferred prescription consultation provided by a pharmacist or pharmacy intern. Three doctor of pharmacy candidates collected data on a standardized form. The percentage and type of drug therapy problems identified during patient consultation were calculated.
RESULTS: Data collectors counseled patients on 1305 prescriptions, and of those, 29 drug therapy problems (2.2%) were identified after the pharmacists' final check. The most common problems involved patient drug allergy or sensitivity (20.7%).
CONCLUSIONS: This project suggests that drug therapy problems in a community pharmacy setting can be identified via patient counseling at the time of prescription pickup.