NICE guideline 5: Medicines optimisation: the safe and effective use of medicines to enable the best possible outcomes

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NICE guideline 5: Medicines optimisation: the safe and effective use of medicines to enable the best possible outcomes Louise Picton Medicines Advice Senior Adviser, Medicines and Prescribing Centre

Outline Background Overview of the guideline key points (refer to the guideline for full recommendations) evidence Who should take action? 2

Outline Background Overview of the guideline key points (refer to the guideline for full recommendations) evidence Who should take action? 3

NICE guidelines on medicines use and practice Published: Developing and updating local formularies Patient Group Directions Managing medicines in care homes Medicines optimisation In development: Antimicrobial stewardship The safe use and management of controlled drugs Managing medicines for people receiving social care in the community

Evidence into practice Maskrey N, 2014 Research National guidance Local implementation RNLI Care of Individual people 5

NICE guideline 5: Medicines optimisation www.nice.org.uk/guidance/ng5 Updates and replaces Technical patient safety solutions for medicines reconciliation on admission of adults to hospital (2007) (PSG001) Updates and replaces recommendation 1.4.2 in Medicines adherence (2009) (CG76) 6

Related NICE guidance Overarching NICE guidance Patient experience in adult NHS services CG138 2012 Medicines optimisation NG5 2015 Medicines adherence CG76 2009 Drug allergy CG183 2014 7

The problem Berwick report (2013) patient safety problems exist throughout the NHS as with every other health system in the world Frontier report (2014) putting in place systems and procedures to improve safety of care might reduce the financial cost of care, as well as improve the quality of life. an increase in polypharmacy has the potential to increase errors and related harm cost of preventable adverse events is likely to be more that 1 billion annually to the NHS 8

Reason s Swiss cheese model Hazards Defences, barriers and safeguards 9

Why is medicines optimisation important? Ageing population use more medicines More people diagnosed with long-term conditions 15 million people in England approx. 30-50% of medicines not taken as intended More people diagnosed with >3 long-term conditions from 1.9 million (2008) to ~3 million (2018) More people taking multiple medicines (polypharmacy) Risk of harm increases with polypharmacy average number of prescription items per year for any one person in England increased from 13 (2003) to 19 (2013) 5-8% of hospital admissions due to preventable adverse effects 10

Definition of medicines optimisation For the purpose of the NICE guideline: a person-centred approach to safe and effective medicines use, to ensure people obtain the best possible outcomes from their medicines 11

Areas covered in the guideline Systems for identifying, reporting and learning from medicines-related patient safety incidents (2 RCTs; 16 OS) Medicines related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another (11 RCTs) Medicines reconciliation (4 RCTs) Medication review (28 RCTs) Self-management plans (14 RCTs) Patient decision aids used in consultations involving medicines (28 RCTs) Clinical decision support (20 RCTs) Medicines-related models of organisational and crosssector working (18 RCTs) 12

Strength of recommendations Must or must not : legal duty to apply the recommendation if the consequences of not following the recommendation could be extremely serious or potentially life threatening Interventions that should or should not be used a strong recommendation: we use offer (and similar words such as refer, ensure or advise ) Interventions that could be used a weaker recommendation: we use consider

Outline Background Overview of the guideline key points (refer to the guideline for full recommendations) evidence Who should take action? 14

The patient journey Doris 15

The patient journey Systems for identifying, reporting and learning from medicines-related patient safety incidents 16

Systems for identifying, reporting and learning from medicines-related patient safety incidents (1) Identify Report Prioritise Take action Personcentred Fair blame culture Apply and share learning 17

Systems for identifying, reporting and learning from medicines-related patient safety incidents (2) Key points: Consider using multiple methods to identify incidents Explore barriers that may reduce reporting Consider applying the principles of PINCER intervention Consider using screening tools (e.g. STOPP/START tool) in some people (e.g. older people, long term conditions, polypharmacy) to identify potential incidents Consider assessing training and education needs 18

The patient journey Systems for identifying reporting and learning from medicines-related patient safety incidents Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another 19

Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another (1) Key points: Complete and accurate information needs to be shared, received, documented and acted upon: 2-way responsibility ideally within 24 hours most effective and secure way specific information to be shared (see guideline) Person-centred: Discuss medicines with the person at the time of transfer Give them a complete and accurate list of their medicines in a suitable format 20

Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another (2) Key points: Consider sending a person s medicines discharge information to their nominated community pharmacy Consider additional support for some groups of people: adults, children and young people taking multiple medicines (polypharmacy) adults, children and young people with chronic or longterm conditions older people 21

The patient journey Systems for identifying reporting and learning from medicines-related patient safety incidents Medicines reconciliation Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another 22

Medicines reconciliation Key points: When and where? In an acute setting within 24 hours In primary care as soon as practically possible, and within 1 week of the GP practice receiving the information Process may need to be carried out more than once during a hospital stay Who to involve? patients and their family members or carers, where appropriate Who does it? Trained and competent health professional Designated health professional to have overall organisational responsibility 23

The patient journey Systems for identifying reporting and learning from medicines-related patient safety incidents Medicines reconciliation Medication review Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another 24

Key points: Medication review Consider medication review for some groups of people where a clear purpose has been identified. For example: adults, children and young people taking multiple medicines (polypharmacy) adults, children and young people with chronic or long-term conditions older people Determine locally who is the most appropriate health professional to carry it out based on knowledge and skills See guideline for specific details on what needs to be taken into account when carrying out a medication review 25

The patient journey Identifying reporting and learning from medicinesrelated patient safety incidents Medicines reconciliation Medication review Decision-making Self-management plans Patient decision aids (medicines) Clinical decision support Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another 26

The patient journey Identifying reporting and learning from medicinesrelated patient safety incidents Medicines reconciliation Medication review Decision making Self-management plans Patient decision aids (medicines) Clinical decision support Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another 27

Key points: Self-management plans Consider using an individualised self-management plan: people with chronic or long-term conditions to support people who want to be involved in managing their medicines Details of what should be discussed and included in the individualised self-management plan is outlined in the guideline Review the self-management plan to ensure the person does not have problems using it 28

The patient journey Identifying reporting and learning from medicinesrelated patient safety incidents Medicines reconciliation Medication review Decision-making Self-management plans Patient decision aids (medicines) Clinical decision support Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another 29

Patient decision aids used in consultations involving medicines (1) Key points: Shared decision-making Offer all people the opportunity to be involved in decisions about their medicines Find out about the person s values and preferences they may be different from the health professional 30

Patient decision aids used in consultations involving medicines (2) Key points: Patient decision aids In a consultation about medicines: offer the person the opportunity to use a patient decision aid (when one is available), to help them make a preference-sensitive decision do not use a patient decision aid to replace discussions with a person may be appropriate to have more than 1 consultation to make an informed decision robust development process, in line with the IPDAS criteria 31

Patient decision aids used in consultations involving medicines (3) Key points: Organisational responsibilities Consider training and education needs to support health professionals Consider identifying and prioritising which patient decision aids are needed for their patient population through, for example, a local medicines decision-making group Disseminate to all relevant health professionals and stakeholders 32

The patient journey Identifying reporting and learning from medicinesrelated patient safety incidents Medicines reconciliation Medication review Decision-making Self-management plans Patient decision aids (medicines) Clinical decision support Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another 33

Key points: Clinical decision support Consider computerised clinical decision support systems to support clinical decision-making and prescribing Should not replace clinical judgement Health professionals need to have the necessary knowledge and skills to use the system, including an understanding of its limitations Requirements of the system outlined in guideline 34

The patient journey Identifying reporting and learning from medicinesrelated patient safety incidents Medicines reconciliation Medication review Decision-making Self-management plans Patient decision aids (medicines) Clinical decision support Models of care Home GP Hospital Community care Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another 35

Medicines-related models of organisational and cross-sector working Key points: Consider multidisciplinary team approach for people who have long-term conditions and take multiple medicines (polypharmacy) Involve a pharmacist with relevant clinical knowledge and skills when making strategic decisions about medicines use or when developing care pathways that involve medicines use 36

The patient journey Identifying reporting and learning from medicinesrelated patient safety incidents Medicines reconciliation Medication review Decision-making Self-management plans Patient decision aids (medicines) Clinical decision support Models of care Home GP Hospital Community care Medicines-related communication systems when patients move from one care setting to another 37

Summary (1) NICE guideline on medicines optimisation covers 8 key areas where medicines use could be optimised Opportunity to reduce preventable medicines-related patient safety incidents systems and processes can help to minimise harm Involving people in decisions about their medicines is crucial there are many opportunities to do this Aim to understand people s knowledge, beliefs and concerns about medicines Ensure people have complete and accurate information about their medicines, in a format that they can understand 38

Summary (2) Prioritise additional support for people who may need it most e.g. people with multimorbidities, polypharmacy and older people Target risky times when medicines-related problems are most likely to occur e.g. hospital discharge Medicines reconciliation Medication review Post-discharge support Effective 2-way, secure and timely communication between providers is needed Needs engagement from everyone across health and social care, not just pharmacy teams Review patients regularly 39

Outline Background Overview of the guideline key points (refer to the guideline for full recommendations) evidence Who should take action? 40

Who should take action? Who should take action? Full guideline section 4.3 Organisations This may include, but is not limited to: clinical commissioning groups commissioners and senior managers in local authorities and the NHS providers of health and social care services Recommendations 1.1.1, 1.1.3 1.1.6, 1.1.8, 1.1.10, 1.1.11 1.2.1, 1.2.6 1.3.4, 1.3.5 1.4.2 1.6.10 1.6.12 1.7.1 1.7.3 1.8.1, 1.8.2 Health professionals 1.1.9 1.2.5 1.3.1 1.3.3, 1.3.6, 1.3.7 1.4.1, 1.4.3 1.5.1 1.5.3 1.6.1 1.6.9 1.7.4 Health and social care practitioners 1.1.2, 1.1.7, 1.1.11 1.2.2 1.2.4 41

Evidence into practice Maskrey N, 2014 Research National guidance Local implementation RNLI Care of Individual people 42