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Journal Article

Citation

McCarthy DM, Cameron KA, King JP, Mullen RJ, Bailey SC, Jacobson KL, Di Francesco L, Davis TC, Parker RM, Wolf MS. Pain Med. 2014; 15(10): 1750-1756.

Affiliation

Health Literacy and Learning Program, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, USA; Department of Emergency Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1111/pme.12499

PMID

25039586

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to determine the frequency and nature of physician, nurse, and pharmacist verbal counseling at the time of a new prescription for an opioid-acetaminophen containing medication as recalled by patients.

DESIGN: A mixed methods approach with data from cross sectional, structured interviews was used. SETTING: The settings were one academic emergency department in Chicago, IL and one outpatient pharmacy at a public hospital in Atlanta, GA. PATIENTS: One hundred forty-nine patients receiving a new prescription for an opioid-acetaminophen medication were enrolled.

METHODS: Interviews assessed patient recall of counseling they received from their physician, nurse, and pharmacist upon receiving the new prescription. Their responses were unitized and assigned to categories.

RESULTS: One hundred forty-nine patients were enrolled; 61.1% African American and 58.4% female. Seven major categories of responses were noted; frequencies of patient recall for counseling in these categories were reported. Four categories related to the content of the counseling discussion were 1) details of administration (patient recall counseling from: physician/nurse only 44.3%, pharmacist only 5.4%, both providers 12.8%); 2) activities to avoid and side effects (36.2%, 4.7%, 8.7%); 3) medication indication (32.9%, 4%, 4%); and 4) addictive potential (9.3%, 1.3%, 0%). Three categories describe patients' recall of the interaction in broad terms: 5) being referred to print informational material accompanying the prescription (MD/RN only 7.4%, pharmacist only 20.1%, both providers 2.7%); 6) having questions solicited (0%, 11.4%, 0%); 7) having no interaction relating to medication counseling (3.4%, 32.2%, 1.3%).

CONCLUSIONS: Patients infrequently recall counseling from providers on topics that are important to prevent harm from opioid-acetaminophen prescriptions. Future patient-centered clinical research should target identifying optimal strategies to convey these critical messages.


Language: en

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