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Canadian pharmacists journal, 2018-09, Vol.151 (5), p.S1-S34
2018

Details

Titel
Pharmacy Practice Research Abstracts: Canadian Pharmacists Conference 2018
Ist Teil von
  • Canadian pharmacists journal, 2018-09, Vol.151 (5), p.S1-S34
Ort / Verlag
Los Angeles, CA: SAGE Publications
Erscheinungsjahr
2018
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • Pharmacists’ ability to counsel a growing immigrant population S7 An evaluation of Alberta pharmacists’ beliefs, attitudes and knowledge surrounding prescription drug abuse and addiction within their practice setting S8 Assessing the perception and implementation of continuous quality improvement in pharmacy professionals: A pre-Safety IQ initiative S9 Benefits, risks and impact of medications on quality of life of a multimorbid patient: A Delphi study S10 Capturing medication safety culture in Saskatchewan community pharmacies using the Medication Safety Cultural Indicator Matrix S11 Cardiovascular assessment and medication management by pharmacists at the UBC site (CAMMPUS) S12 Characterizing opioid use at an academic family health team S13 Cost-effectiveness of pharmacist care for hypertension in Japan S14 Cost-effectiveness of pharmacist care for managing patients at high risk for cardiovascular disease in Canada S15 Determining key quality assurance indicators for Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experiences placement site visits S16 Economic analysis of introducing a remunerated community pharmacist consultation service on influenza vaccination for Ontario seniors S17 Establishing HIV point-of-care testing (POCT) programs in Canadian community pharmacies: A new “APPROACH” to HIV testing. S18 Evaluating community pharmacists’ implicit and explicit bias toward black and Arab individuals S19 Evaluation and perspectives from community pharmacists of the Medication Management Certificate Program at the University of British Columbia’s Pharmacists Clinic S20 Impact of a pharmacist-administered deprescribing intervention on nursing home residents: A randomized controlled trial S21 Impact of collaboration between primary care pharmacists and a neurologist in the management of headache patients: A retrospective chart review S22 Mandatory quality-related events reporting in Canada: A province-wide review over 7 years S23 Outcomes of diabetes management by pharmacists: Identifying practice quality issues S31 The availability of pharmacists with Additional Prescribing Authorization in Alberta in relation to vulnerable populations’ distribution: A cross-sectional study S32 The use of potentially inappropriate medications in older adults in Quebec: A population-based study S33 ToolQit: An evidence-based communication and decision-guiding tool to evaluate the complexities of QT prolongation S34 Will I lose my license for that? A closer look at Canadian disciplinary hearings and what it means for pharmacists’ practice to full scope A multi-incident analysis on medication incidents associated with patient harm Adrian Boucher, BSc, PharmD; Certina Ho, RPh, BScPhm, MISt, MEd, PhD; Sonya Dhanjal, BSc, PharmD (candidate) Objectives Medication incidents associated with patient harm can either result in sub-optimal disease management or expose patients to unnecessary life-threatening situations, calling for attention to such incidents and the need to adopt strategies to improve overall patient and medication safety. Methods We performed a literature review and applied a program evaluation process to a standardized CQI program in community pharmacy practice (e.g., SafetyNET-Rx in Nova Scotia or COMPASS in Saskatchewan), which involved anonymous medication incident reporting, a routine medication safety self-assessment and regular staff meetings for planning and monitoring CQI action plans within the practice setting.
Sprache
Englisch; Französisch
Identifikatoren
ISSN: 1715-1635
eISSN: 1913-701X
DOI: 10.1177/1715163518797716
Titel-ID: cdi_pubmedcentral_primary_oai_pubmedcentral_nih_gov_6344977

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