Reducing Post-discharge Adverse Drug Events Amongst the Elderly: a Multi-centre Electronic Deprescribing Intervention
Adverse Drug Event
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Adverse Drug Event focused on measuring Adverse Drug Event, Choosing Wisely Canada, Deprescribing, Elderly, Frailty, High value healthcare, Medication rationalization, Medication stewardship, Polypharmacy
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- patients aged 65 years and older
- patients who take five or more medications in the community
- patients who are cognitively impaired or otherwise unable to provide consent will still be included as this subpopulation of patients may be at greatest risk of ADEs because of their communication problems.
Exclusion Criteria:
- patients who take four or fewer medications in the community
- patients expected to die within 30 days or be transferred to a palliative care unit/another hospital
- patients without provincial health insurance or who normally live outside that province
- patients previously enrolled
- inability for patient or proxy to speak English or French
- no means of contacting patient or proxy post-discharge
Patients discharged from non-study units will be excluded unless that unit is a transitional care, rehabilitation, or post-acute care unit which bridges the gap between acute medical hospitalization and community services.
Sites / Locations
- Foothills Medical Centre, Calgary
- University of Alberta, Edmonton
- University of British Columbia, St-Paul's Hospital
- Kingston General Hospital
- The Ottawa Hospital
- University Health Network, Toronto
- McGill University Health Centre
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
No Intervention
Experimental
Control
Intervention
All participants in the control arm will receive medication reconciliation at admission and discharge, and identical follow up, but no prioritized deprescribing list will be generated.
Participants in the intervention arm will be electronically screened using an electronic software "MedSafer" which will generate output of PIMs that will be brought to the attention of the CTU team via the unit pharmacist as "deprescribing opportunities". (Note that in the case of multiple recommendations, they will be limited and prioritized so as to avoid overwhelming the treating team.) Based on their own expert medical judgement, in collaboration with the patient/caregiver and other relevant clinicians, a decision will be made to deprescribe if appropriate by the patient's in-hospital doctors.