Pharmacy Practice Faculty Publications

Don’t Leave Without Them: Dispensing Asthma Medications to Pediatric Patients upon Discharge is Associated with Decreased Hospital Readmissions

Document Type

Abstract

Publication Date

10-2012

Journal Title

Pharmacotherapy: The Journal of Human Pharmacology and Drug Therapy

Volume

32

Issue

10

First Page

e227

Article Number

170E

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/j.1875-9114.2012.01219

Abstract

PURPOSE: The objective of this study was to determine if patients who obtain discharge medications from a pediatric institution’s outpatient pharmacy after an emergency department or inpatient admission for asthma have a lower 30-day readmission rate than those who do not obtain discharge medications from the outpatient pharmacy.

METHODS: This multi-phase study included an initial chart review, an intervention period, and a second retrospective chart review. The chart reviews included patients age 2 years and older with a primary discharge diagnosis of asthma or wheezing. During the intervention phase, pharmacists promoted use of the outpatient pharmacy by patients admitted for these conditions using multiple methods. In each chart review, the patients readmitted for asthma or wheezing within 30 days were classified as either outpatient pharmacy users (OPP users) or non-OPP users. Differences in readmission rates between OPP users and non-OPP users, as well as differences in overall OPP utilization, were analyzed before and during the intervention phase using a Chi-square test.

RESULTS: The initial chart review found no significant difference in 30 day readmission rates between OPP users and non-OPP users (6.2% and 7.5%, respectively; p=0.283). The number of OPP users increased significantly from the first chart review to the second (11.8% and 45.8%, respectively; p

CONCLUSIONS: Dispensing medications to pediatric patients upon discharge should be part of future efforts to decrease readmissions for asthma.

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