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Impact of pharmacist-conducted anticoagulation patient education and telephone follow-up on transitions of care: a randomized controlled trial.


ABSTRACT:

Background

There is limited published data in Lebanon evaluating the impact of supplemental education for anticoagulants use, especially DOACs, on clinical outcomes such as bleeding. The study aims to assess the impact of pharmacist-conducted anticoagulation education and follow-up on bleeding and readmission rates.

Methods

This study was a randomized, non-blinded interventional study conducted between August 2017 and July 2019 in a tertiary care teaching Lebanese hospital. Participants were inpatients ?18?years discharged on an oral anticoagulant for treatment. Block randomization was used. The control group received the standard nursing counseling while the intervention group additionally received pharmacy counseling. Phone call follow-ups were done on day 3 and 30 post-discharge. Primary outcomes included readmission rates and any bleeding event at day 3 and 30 post-discharge. Secondary outcomes included documented elements of education in the medical records and reported mortality upon day 30 post-discharge.

Results

Two hundred patients were recruited in the study (100 patients in each study arm) with a mean age of 73.9?years. In the pharmacist-counseled group, more patients contacted their physician within 3?days (14% versus 4%; p?=?0.010), received explicit elements of education (p?ConclusionsAlthough pharmacist-conducted anticoagulation education did not appear to reduce bleeding or readmission rates at day 30, pharmacist education significantly increased patient communication with their providers in the early days post-discharge.

Trial registration

Lebanon Clinical Trial Registry LBCTR2020033424 . Retrospectively registered. Date of registration: 06/03/2020.

SUBMITTER: Karaoui LR 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7885504 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Impact of pharmacist-conducted anticoagulation patient education and telephone follow-up on transitions of care: a randomized controlled trial.

Karaoui Lamis R LR   Ramia Elsy E   Mansour Hanine H   Haddad Nisrine N   Chamoun Nibal N  

BMC health services research 20210216 1


<h4>Background</h4>There is limited published data in Lebanon evaluating the impact of supplemental education for anticoagulants use, especially DOACs, on clinical outcomes such as bleeding. The study aims to assess the impact of pharmacist-conducted anticoagulation education and follow-up on bleeding and readmission rates.<h4>Methods</h4>This study was a randomized, non-blinded interventional study conducted between August 2017 and July 2019 in a tertiary care teaching Lebanese hospital. Partic  ...[more]

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