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Journal Article

Citation

Malý J, Doseděl M, Vosátka J, Mala-Ladova K, Kubena AA, Brabcová I, Hajduchová H, Bártlová S, Tóthová V, Vlček J. J Appl Biomed 2019; 17(1): 60.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019)

DOI

10.32725/jab.2019.001

PMID

34907747

Abstract

This study aimed to analyze the effect of fall risk-increasing drugs (FRIDs) and drug-related factors relative to falls through clinical pharmacy service in hospitalized patients, focusing on the relevance of clinical pharmacist evaluation in the context of physician assessment. A prospective study of inpatient falls was conducted in 2017 retrieving data from 4 hospitals in South Bohemia, Czech Republic. An online database was developed to collect patient and fall-related data, and fall evaluation records. Healthcare professionals classified the overall effect of drugs on falls using Likert scale. Univariate and multivariate correlations were performed with a significance level of p < 0.05. Out of the total 280 falls (mean age of patients 77.0 years), a mean of 2.8 diagnoses with fall-related risk, 8.8 drugs, and 4.1 FRIDs per fall were identified. Incidence of falls decreased quarterly (p < 0.001). Use of FRIDs were positively associated with increasing age (p = 0.007). Clinical pharmacists were more likely to identify pharmacotherapy as the relevant fall-related risk, compared to physicians evaluation (p < 0.001). An increasing total number of prescribed drugs as well as higher number of FRIDs increased the suspicion in both professionals in the context of drug-related causes of falls.


Language: en

Keywords

Falls; Clinical pharmacy service; Drug therapy; Fall risk-increasing drugs; Hospital inpatients

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