DRUG THERAPY PROBLEMS IN ASTHMA IDENTIFIED DURING PHARMACIST-LED EDUCATIONAL INTERVENTIONS:(TJPS-2020-0166.R3)

Kosisochi Chinwendu Amorha, Mathew Jegbefume Okonta, Chinwe Victoria Ukwe

Abstract


Background: Drug therapy problems (DTPs) interfere with desired goals of therapy. This study evaluated DTPs in asthma identified during a pharmacist-led intervention in the asthma clinics of two Nigerian hospitals.
Methods: This intervention study was conducted in the asthma clinics, University of Nigeria Teaching Hospital (UNTH) and Lagos University Teaching Hospital (LUTH). Eligible participants were patients with asthma recruited into a pharmacist-led intervention study and followed up for 6 months. The Pharmaceutical Care Network Europe – Drug Related Problem Classification V6.2 in English (PCNE-DRP V6.2) was utilized to evaluate the DTPs.
Results: Seventy-eight (78) patients with asthma participated. A total of 158 DTPs were identified. Majority of the DTPs were manifest (96.2%). Salmeterol/Fluticasone (Seretide® Diskus®) was most implicated (43.7%). The most common type of DTP was patients not benefitting from the optimal effect of their drug treatment (63.9%). More than half of the causes were from drug under-used/administered (55.1%) or the patients unable to use the drug form as directed (60.1%). About three-quarter (76.6%) of the DTPs were totally solved.
Conclusions: Drug use/administration process was the major cause of the DTPs. Patient counseling accounted for a bulk of the interventions. Pharmacists should be proactive in preventing, identifying and resolving DTPs.

:TJPS-2020-0166.R3


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