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American Journal of Pharmacy and Health Research

Keyword

Pharmacist

Explore 2 research publications tagged with this keyword

2Publications
6Authors
1Years

Publications Tagged with "Pharmacist"

2 publications found

2015

2 publications

Evaluation of Pharmacists' Attitudes toward Mental Health Care, Psychiatrists and Mentally Ill Patients

S I Yakubu et al.
9/1/2015

Over recent years, there has been a steady increase of pharmacists interaction with psyhiatrists and mentally ill patients. Thus, this study was set out to evaluate the attitudes of pharmacists toward psychiatrists, mentally ill patients and mental health care in a neuro-psyhiatric hospital. We have adapted with modification a pretested survey instrument comprised 28 statements, which the respondents rated on a five-step Likert scale. These questionnaires were distributed to all the fifty pharmacists listed, out of which 37 (74%) respondents perceived psychiatrists, hospital for mental health care and psychiatric patients in a favourable manner. The psychiatrists were viewed as reliable professionals with established expertise, and psychiatric patients were considered to be harmless similar to normal individuals. The pharmacists attitudes toward hospital for mental health care were slightly tended in the positive direction.

Clinical Pharmacists’ Development and Quality Assurance of Medication Orders in a Computerized Order Entry System

Justin W. Tenney and Kelly Horton
9/1/2015

This study is to evaluate the development process of medication orders in a computer system for a soon to be opened women and children’s hospital. To determine which therapeutic categories include medications that may have less defined dosing regimens. Medication orders were built into the Computerized Order Entry (COE) system and evaluated individually by pharmacists from various clinical practice backgrounds. These pre-constructed, quick entry medication orders will present common medication attributes in a drop down menu when a physician searches for a desired medication. The medication orders involved 14 components that were evaluated by the clinical pharmacists. For a medication order to be considered complete, it had to be reviewed by two consecutive pharmacists who did not see any further necessary changes to the previous pharmacist’s medication order. The number of pharmacists required to have 3 pharmacists in consecutive agreement on the medication order ranged from 3 to 9 pharmacists. The therapeutic group that required the most pharmacist evaluations to reach consensus was antimicrobials and the therapeutic category that required the least amount of pharmacist reviews was antidiabetic medications. After 6 pharmacists had reviewed the medication orders, 25.7% of the antimicrobials were without three consecutive pharmacist approvals. The most common change made after 5 reviews were completed was adjustments to age and weight filters. As there was variability in the number of pharmacist reviews required to reach completion, greater attention to detail should be considered in therapeutic areas that required more evaluations to reach a consensus.

Keyword Statistics
Total Publications:2
Years Active:1
Latest Publication:2015
Contributing Authors:6