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Critical care pharmacy workforce: UK deployment and characteristics in 2015

Critical care pharmacy workforce: UK deployment and characteristics in 2015
Critical care pharmacy workforce: UK deployment and characteristics in 2015
Objective: clinical pharmacists reduce medication errors and optimize the use of medication in critically ill patients, although actual staffing level and deployment of UK pharmacists is unknown. The primary aim was to investigate the UK deployment of the clinical pharmacy workforce in critical care and compare this with published standards.

Methods: an electronic data entry tool was created and distributed for UK critical care pharmacy services to record their critical care workforce deployment data.

Key findings: data were received for 279 critical care units in 171 organizations. Clinical pharmacist input was identified for 98.6% of critical care units. The median weekday pharmacist input to critical care was 0.045 whole time equivalents per Level 3 (ICU) bed with significant interregional variation. Weekend services were sparse. Pharmacists spent 24.5% of time on the multidisciplinary team ward round, 58.5% of time on independent patient review and 17% of time on other critical care professional support activities. There is significant variation in staffing levels when services are stratified by highest level of competence of critical care pharmacist within an organization (P = 0.03), with significant differences in time spent on the multi-disciplinary ward round (P = 0.010) and on other critical care activities (P = 0.009), but not on independent patient review.

Conclusions: investment in pharmacy services is required to improve access to clinical pharmacy expertise at weekends, on MDT ward rounds and for other critical care activities.
0961-7671
325--333
Borthwick, Mark
c9799681-4f55-4071-9012-89d11ad877cb
Barton, G.
82f7be35-5f09-4141-93ad-4237116f59c5
Bourne, R.S.
271c1df1-9430-4da0-b71e-f6ee41f5bc59
McKenzie, C.
ec344dee-5777-49c5-970e-6326e82c9f8c
Borthwick, Mark
c9799681-4f55-4071-9012-89d11ad877cb
Barton, G.
82f7be35-5f09-4141-93ad-4237116f59c5
Bourne, R.S.
271c1df1-9430-4da0-b71e-f6ee41f5bc59
McKenzie, C.
ec344dee-5777-49c5-970e-6326e82c9f8c

Borthwick, Mark, Barton, G., Bourne, R.S. and McKenzie, C. (2017) Critical care pharmacy workforce: UK deployment and characteristics in 2015. International Journal of Pharmacy Practice, 26 (4), 325--333. (doi:10.1111/ijpp.12408).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: clinical pharmacists reduce medication errors and optimize the use of medication in critically ill patients, although actual staffing level and deployment of UK pharmacists is unknown. The primary aim was to investigate the UK deployment of the clinical pharmacy workforce in critical care and compare this with published standards.

Methods: an electronic data entry tool was created and distributed for UK critical care pharmacy services to record their critical care workforce deployment data.

Key findings: data were received for 279 critical care units in 171 organizations. Clinical pharmacist input was identified for 98.6% of critical care units. The median weekday pharmacist input to critical care was 0.045 whole time equivalents per Level 3 (ICU) bed with significant interregional variation. Weekend services were sparse. Pharmacists spent 24.5% of time on the multidisciplinary team ward round, 58.5% of time on independent patient review and 17% of time on other critical care professional support activities. There is significant variation in staffing levels when services are stratified by highest level of competence of critical care pharmacist within an organization (P = 0.03), with significant differences in time spent on the multi-disciplinary ward round (P = 0.010) and on other critical care activities (P = 0.009), but not on independent patient review.

Conclusions: investment in pharmacy services is required to improve access to clinical pharmacy expertise at weekends, on MDT ward rounds and for other critical care activities.

This record has no associated files available for download.

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 11 September 2017
Published date: 11 October 2017

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 478810
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478810
ISSN: 0961-7671
PURE UUID: 4c9c70e8-3d6f-45a4-8c2f-1f4047b56e4b
ORCID for C. McKenzie: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5190-9711

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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2023 16:35
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:23

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Contributors

Author: Mark Borthwick
Author: G. Barton
Author: R.S. Bourne
Author: C. McKenzie ORCID iD

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