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Adapting a community pharmacy intervention to improve medication safety
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Adapting a community pharmacy intervention to improve medication safety

Maria E. Berbakov, Emily L. Hoffins, Jamie A. Stone, Aaron M. Gilson, Jason S. Chladek, Taylor L. Watterson, Elin C. Lehnbom, Jukrin Moon, Richard J. Holden, Nora Jacobson, …
Journal of the American Pharmacists Association, Vol.64(1), pp.159-168
01/01/2024
DOI: 10.1016/j.japh.2023.11.009
PMCID: PMC10872665
PMID: 37940099

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Abstract

Background: Community pharmacies are an ideal location to address challenges of over-thecounter medication safety, yet many successful interventions are only tested in a few pharmacies without expansion, creating unrealized opportunities to improve patient care on a larger scale. Scaling up to numerous pharmacies can be challenging because each community pharmacy has unique needs and layouts and requires individualized adaptation. Objectives: This paper reports techniques for (a) adapting a community pharmacy intervention to fit the unique physical layout and patient needs of health system pharmacy sites without increasing staff workload, (b) identifying strategies to gather feedback on adaptations from stakeholders, and (c) developing materials to share with pharmacy champions for them to independently implement and sustain the intervention in their organization. Practice description: The study team collaborated with Aurora Pharmacy, Inc to develop an intervention designed to increase awareness of safe over-the-counter medication use for older adults. Practice innovation: Senior Safe, a community pharmacy-based intervention, was designed, implemented, and tested using the Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, and Sustainment implementation framework. Evaluation methods: Senior Safe was adapted through pilot testing and a randomized control trial. Feedback was collected from key stakeholders, including pharmacy staff, older adults, and a research advisory group. Results: A finalized version of Senior Safe, as well as an implementation package, was provided to Aurora Pharmacy to integrate into all 63 sites. Conclusion: This multiphase study illustrated that refining an intervention is possible and welcomed by pharmacy staff, but it requires time, resources, and funds to create an impactful, sustainable community pharmacy intervention. (c) 2023 American Pharmacists Association (R). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Life Sciences & Biomedicine Pharmacology & Pharmacy Science & Technology

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