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Ensuring Clinical Appropriateness and Safety of Pharmacological Therapies in Nursing Home Residents
Sponsor: Lugano Istituti Sociali
Summary
The goal of this clinical study is to evaluate whether a structured, clinical pharmacology team-led medication review improves the appropriateness and safety of medication prescribing in elderly nursing home (NH) residents. The study will also assess the impact of the intervention on indicators of inappropriate prescribing and resident-centred clinical outcomes. The main questions the study aims to answer are: 1) Does a structured, digitally supported, medication review led by clinical pharmacologists reduce inappropriate medication prescribing, as measured by the Medication Appropriateness Index (MAI), in elderly NH residents? 2) Does the intervention reduce indicators of inappropriate prescribing, including potentially inappropriate prescriptions, therapeutic duplicates, drug-drug interactions and anticholinergic burden? 3) Does the intervention improve resident-centred clinical outcomes, such as falls, fractures, delirium, hyper-sedation, emergency department visits and hospitalizations? This is a single-arm, non-randomized, pre-post study conducted in seven NHs in Southern Switzerland. Each resident will serve as their own control, with outcomes compared between a 3-month pre-intervention period and a 3-month post-intervention period. The intervention consists of: 1) An individualized, digitally supported, medication review conducted by the team of clinical pharmacologists; 2) Face-to-face feedback to NH healthcare professionals responsible for managing residents' medications; 3) Tailored educational sessions addressing common prescribing issues identified during the medication review. Participants will: be aged 65 years or older and reside in participating NHs; have their routinely collected clinical and medication data assessed during a 3-month pre-intervention period; receive the intervention integrated into routine care, with any medication changes implemented by treating clinicians. The study is low-risk, non-invasive, and embedded in routine NH care. The results will provide evidence on the clinical effectiveness of integrating clinical pharmacology expertise into inter-professional medication management in Swiss NHs.
Official title: Appropriateness of Medication Prescribing in Nursing Homes: A Pre-Post Study to Evaluate the Effectiveness of a Clinical Pharmacology Team-Led, Digitally Supported, Inter-Professional Collaboration
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
65 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
219
Start Date
2026-03-01
Completion Date
2026-12
Last Updated
2026-02-27
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Multi-Component Intervention on Medication Prescribing
The study intervention is a multi-component procedure led by a team of clinical pharmacologists to improve medication prescribing among nursing home residents. It includes: 1) individualized medication review with a comprehensive review of each resident's medications, digitally supported; the assessment of medication prescribing appropriateness using the Medication Appropriateness Index (MAI), the identification of key indicators of inappropriate prescribing and the assessment of resident-centred clinical outcomes; 2) face-to-face feedback with nursing home healthcare professionals responsible for managing residents' medications to discuss recommended adjustments for each resident, fostering inter-professional collaboration; 3) tailored educational sessions to nursing home healthcare professionals responsible for managing residents' medications, addressing common prescribing issues identified during medication review. No drugs or medical devices will be used during this procedure.
Locations (1)
Institute of Pharmacological Science of Southern Switzerland, Ente Ospedaliero Cantonale
Lugano, Switzerland