Pharmacist discharge summary: Impact of inpatient to community pharmacist handoff at hospital discharge

Community pharmacists are often the initial health professionals whom patients encounter after hospital discharge but are rarely provided relevant discharge information. Implement a pharmacist-to-pharmacist discharge summary (P2PDS) to improve the safety of pharmacist care provision to patients tran...

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Published inJournal of the American Pharmacists Association Vol. 63; no. 1; pp. 198 - 203.e4
Main Authors Kerstenetzky-Brenny, Luiza, Adamsick, Meagan L., Lauscher, Rebecca L., Kennelty, Korey A., Hager, David R.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.01.2023
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Summary:Community pharmacists are often the initial health professionals whom patients encounter after hospital discharge but are rarely provided relevant discharge information. Implement a pharmacist-to-pharmacist discharge summary (P2PDS) to improve the safety of pharmacist care provision to patients transitioning home from the hospital. Inpatient pharmacists at an academic medical center conduct discharge medication reconciliation and release discharge electronic prescriptions to dispensing pharmacies. A multidisciplinary intersystem quality improvement project was conducted to demonstrate the impact of clinical information sharing via the P2PDS to community pharmacists. With input from community pharmacists, the P2PDS was created and implemented on inpatient units throughout the health system. Outcomes assessed included identification of medication discrepancies, enrollment into reimbursable medication management services, and pharmacist confidence when filling discharge prescriptions. During the study period, community pharmacists identified a total of 388 medication discrepancies in 161 patients; 16% of discrepancies were considered “unintentional.” Twenty-five discharging patients were identified for enrollment in medication management services, with 20 of these patients enrolling in all 3 services (medication delivery, synchronization, and medication packaging). The P2PDS increased community pharmacist confidence in discharge medication filling (40% vs. 95%, P < 0.001) and increased the percent of patients receiving community pharmacist medication reconciliation (14%-76%, P < 0.001). Enhancing pharmacist communication across practice settings with a P2PDS decreases care fragmentation through identification of medication discrepancies and improves pharmacist confidence in patient care provision.
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ISSN:1544-3191
1544-3450
DOI:10.1016/j.japh.2022.08.005