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Co-design of a multifaceted intervention to improve quality handover of medicine information at discharge from hospital

  • H Laetitia Hattingh
  • , Matt Percival
  • , Kate Johnston
  • , Georgia Tobiano
  • , Hayley Hirsch
  • , Carl de Wet
  • , Salim Memon
  • , Mark A Morgan
  • , Rachael Raleigh
  • , Noela Baglot
  • , Brigid M Gillespie

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Background:
Timely and accurate discharge medicine information is essential for primary care clinicians, including general practitioners and community pharmacists, to provide safe and effective post-discharge care. Inadequate handover of discharge medicines poses risks of medication-related harm, compromising patient safety and leads to hospital readmissions. This study aimed to develop a multifaceted intervention targeting older patients (>65 years) to enhance medicine handover at hospital discharge.

Methods:
Following an initial consensus-building workshop, a structured five-step co-design process was implemented. Step 1 involved workshops and interviews with hospital clinicians, hospital leadership, primary care providers, and consumers experienced in discharge medicine handover. Stakeholder input in Step 2 refined intervention components and developed training materials. Step 3 obtained endorsement from health service decision makers and governance approvals. Step 4 included pharmacist upskilling, end-user testing, and feedback collection. Step 5 finalised intervention components and constructed a Logic Model.

Results:
Seventy-eight stakeholders participated in workshops and interviews from August to November 2023. Four key medicine handover objectives for older patients emerged, which were operationalised into intervention recommendations over a five-month period (December 2023-April 2024). Component 1 empowered patients to query clinicians about their medications via a dedicated website with a question builder and evidence-based resources. Component 2 involved training doctors to document reasons for medicine changes in patient records. Component 3 implemented patient risk stratification to guide tailored strategies for communication to primary care clinicians. Component 4 focused on discharge reconciliation planning by unit pharmacists in collaboration with physicians. End-user testing yielded positive feedback.

Conclusions:
A co-designed multifaceted intervention was developed to enhance medicine handover during hospital discharge. The intervention will undergo feasibility testing to assess its impact on reducing medication-related harm and hospital readmissions.
Original languageEnglish
Article number859
Pages (from-to)1-12
Number of pages12
JournalBMC Health Services Research
Volume25
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2025

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