An Experimental Education Project for Consultations of Older Adults during the Pandemic and Healthcare Lockdown
Abstract
:1. Background
2. Objective
3. Patient Involvement and Methods
3.1. Students Involvement
3.2. Consultation Process
3.3. Data Collection
3.4. Data Analysis
4. Results
Category of Detected Drug Therapy Problem (According to Strand et al. [19]) | Example | Medical Student’s Perspective | Pharmacy Student’s Perspective |
---|---|---|---|
Untreated condition | Arterial hypertension (HTN) (inappropriate antihypertensive treatment scheme) | Revision: HTN treatment, medication indications, combination therapy Acquisition: applied pharmacokinetics of combined medications, possible interactions | Revision: antihypertensive medication list Acquisition: diagnostic approach toward HTN, symptoms and complications recognition |
No medical indication | Excessive use of proton pump inhibitor (PPI) (>8 weeks duration without indications) | Revision: symptoms and indications for PPI use Acquisition: long- and short-term consequences of excessive PPI use (interactions) | Revision: mechanism of action of PPI, food–drug and drug–drug interactions Acquisition: indications for PPI use |
Inappropriate medication | Nonsteroid anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) analgesic use and concomitant gastrointestinal condition (gastritis) | Revision: contraindications and precautions to NSAIDs Acquisition: analgesic alternatives, NSAID-related interactions | Revision: NSAIDs and their adverse effects (i.e., gastrointestinal), analgesic alternatives Acquisition: NSAID indications |
Too low medication dosage | Poorly controlled asthma | Revision: guideline-based (GINA, GOLD) treatment and recognition of poorly controlled asthma Acquisition: steroids and add-on medications | Revision: examples of anti-asthmatic medications and their indication Acquisition: asthma symptoms, staging, and exacerbating factors, recognizing reliable guidelines |
Too high medication dosage | Too high metformin dose (prediabetic state) | Revision: diabetes and prediabetes diagnostic criteria, treatment schemes, adverse effects, and monitoring parameters Acquisition: metformin dosage | Revision: metformin indications and dosage Acquisition: prediabetes and diabetes diagnostic criteria and symptoms |
Adverse effect | Allergic reaction to herbal dietary supplement) | Revision: differentiating possible exanthema causes (dermatological symptomatology) Acquisition: adverse effects of dietary supplements | Revision: indications for the dietary supplements Acquisition: dermatological symptomatology |
Non-adherence | Statin withdrawal | Revision: positive cardiovascular (CV) benefits of statins based on European Society of Cardiology guidelines Acquisition: pharmacokinetics of statins | Revision: statins’ pleiotropic effects, mechanism of action Acquisition: importance of medication compliance and ideal cholesterol target based on CV risk category |
Interactions | Beta blocker and nondihydropyridine calcium channel blocker (CCB) combination | Revision: hazardous combinations of medications in antihypertensive treatment schemes Acquisition: awareness of interactions | Revision: mechanism of action of antihypertensive medications Acquisition: recognizing symptoms such as bradycardia |
Theme | Quotations |
---|---|
Acknowledging the initiative | “I have read about it in the newspaper. I have thought it must be worth calling.” “Local senior club has notified each of our members. I am always keen on benefiting from somebody’s knowledge.” “I find it hard to point out one specific source. In my environment it constitutes common knowledge that this initiative was designed for assistance of the older patients.” |
Expectations and motivation toward the initiative | “At the time I needed help. I was curious if any other methods of my condition management are available.” “I often participate in the events organized by our local University of the Third Age. It has always been pleasing.” “I have lots of medications administered. I wanted to consult it back then.” “I stay conscious of my health. I am interested in both natural and academic medicine. I stay alert and verify my treatment.” |
Attitude toward online consultations performed by medical and pharmacy students | “I find these consultations very helpful. I really appreciate the fact I had an opportunity to revise my medication list. Students remained investigative and caring—they called me several times to make sure I understood their recommendations correctly.” “I think it is better to clarify your concerns with professionals rather than search for answers on your own. Especially when it involves health-related topics. Thanks to them I returned to prescribed medications I had dechallenged on my own. Earlier, I didn’t acknowledge importance of my therapy.” “It remains crucial that recommendations were discussed with their tutors. However they are about to graduate they still may lack practical knowledge. I also think that remote formula may be problematic for some people let alone restrictive in terms of patient examination. Thankfully, students offered different means of communication depending on preferences—computer or telephone.” |
Attitude toward interdisciplinary characteristics of performed consultations | “It is certainly going to help them in their working life. It is important to learn how to work with different professions.” “They were supplementing each other. I have talked to both medical and pharmacy students equally.” “I have personally felt well-cared.” “Consulting real-life patients must have been challenging for both students.” |
Post-pandemic perspective of the initiative and suggestions for expansion | “It could serve its purpose. Doctors often do not have enough time to spare for such detailed explanations and discussions.” “I know that some inquiries do not necessitate an appointment in the clinic. Many inquiries are often trivial—students could definitely cope with it. I would personally appreciate settlement of working hours.” “This service should be advertised and expanded. Both students and older patients can benefit from it.” |
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions and Practical Value
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Neumann-Podczaska, A.; Seostianin, M.; Madejczyk, K.; Merks, P.; Religioni, U.; Tomczak, Z.; Tobis, S.; Moga, D.C.; Ryan, M.; Wieczorowska-Tobis, K. An Experimental Education Project for Consultations of Older Adults during the Pandemic and Healthcare Lockdown. Healthcare 2021, 9, 425. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9040425
Neumann-Podczaska A, Seostianin M, Madejczyk K, Merks P, Religioni U, Tomczak Z, Tobis S, Moga DC, Ryan M, Wieczorowska-Tobis K. An Experimental Education Project for Consultations of Older Adults during the Pandemic and Healthcare Lockdown. Healthcare. 2021; 9(4):425. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9040425
Chicago/Turabian StyleNeumann-Podczaska, Agnieszka, Mikołaj Seostianin, Konrad Madejczyk, Piotr Merks, Urszula Religioni, Zofia Tomczak, Sławomir Tobis, Daniela Claudia Moga, Melody Ryan, and Katarzyna Wieczorowska-Tobis. 2021. "An Experimental Education Project for Consultations of Older Adults during the Pandemic and Healthcare Lockdown" Healthcare 9, no. 4: 425. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9040425