Title of article :
The impact of clinical pharmacist in a cardiac-surgery intensive care unit
Author/Authors :
Al-Jazairi, Abdulrazaq S. King Faisal Specialist Hospital Research Center - Department of Pharmacy Services, Saudi Arabia , Al-Agil, Amal A. King Faisal Specialist Hospital Research Center - Department of Pharmacy Services, Saudi Arabia , Asiri, Yousif A. King Saud University - College of Pharmacy - Department of Clinical Pharmacy, Saudi Arabia , Al-Kholi, Tariq A. King Faisal Specialist Hospital Research Center - Department of Cardiovascular Disease, Saudi Arabia , Akhras, Nathem S. King Faisal Specialist Hospital Research Center - Department of Pharmacy Services, Saudi Arabia , Horanieh, Bashar K. King Faisal Specialist Hospital Research Center - Department of Pharmacy Services, Saudi Arabia
Abstract :
Objectives: To evaluate the clinical pharmacists’ interventions in an intensive care unit (ICU) setting with regard to their acceptance by the medical team, frequency, clinical significance, and targeted patient’s outcomes.Methods: This is a prospective, non-comparative, observational study evaluating the clinical pharmacist interventions in an ICU setting from December 2002 to May 2003. The study was conducted in a 19-bed Cardiac-Surgery ICU at King Faisal Specialist Hospital Research Center, a tertiary-care hospital in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The clinical pharmacist performed daily multi-disciplinary team rounds, with documentation of all his interventions. On the same day, a physician, who is a part of the team, verified all interventions for validity and clinical significance. The institutional Office of Research Affairs approved the study.Results: The clinical pharmacist intervened 394 times on the 600 patients [0.66 intervention-per-patient]. The medical team accepted almost all interventions (94.3%). The main drug-related problems were the following: no drug prescribed for medical condition (33.2%), inappropriate dosing regimen (28.9%), and no indication for drug use (14.3%). Approximately 55.7% of the interventions targeted enhancing therapeutic outcomes, whilst 21.8% of interventions resulted in the prevention of an adverse drug reaction. The interventions that may have resulted in decreasing mortality, preventing, or reducing organ damage, or decreasing hospitalization, represented 8.1% of all interventions.Conclusion: Participation of a clinical pharmacist in the daily multidisciplinary team rounds in an ICU setting significantly reduces unfavorable morbidities and enhances therapeutic outcomes.
Journal title :
Saudi Medical Journal
Journal title :
Saudi Medical Journal