Brazilian Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences (Dec 2013)

Pharmaceutical care in transplant patients in a university hospital: pharmaceutical interventions

  • Bruna Cristina Cardoso Martins,
  • Thalita Rodrigues de Souza,
  • Ângela Maria Pita Tavares Luna,
  • Marta Maria de França Fonteles,
  • Paulo Yuri Milen Firmino,
  • Paula Frassinetti Castelo Branco Camurça Fernandes,
  • José Huygens Parente Garcia,
  • Cláudia Maria Costa de Oliveira,
  • Eugenie Desirèe Rabelo Néri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/S1984-82502013000400005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 49, no. 4
pp. 659 – 668

Abstract

Read online

A descriptive and prospective study was conducted on the pharmaceutical care in the post-transplant outpatient clinic of Hospital Universitario Walter Cantidio of Universidade Federal do Ceará (HUWC/UFC), in Fortaleza- Ceará in the period of April to October of 2011. The aim of the present study was to describe the pharmaceutical interventions performed in a Pharmaceutical Care service structured in the liver and kidney transplant outpatient clinic of an academic hospital. The Pharmaceutical interventions (PI) were classified according to Sabater et al.(2005), with significance based on Riba et al.(2000) and the Negative Outcomes associated with Medication (NOM) established at the Third Consensus of Granada. Statistical analyses were performed using the Epi Info v.3.5.1 program and hypothesis tests were done with the SigmaPlot v.10.0 program. A chi-squared (X²) test was utilized for statistical analysis of the sample. A total of 97 patients were followed, where 54 problems related to medications were identified and 139 PI performed. The main PI were in education of the patient about treatment (n=111; 80%) (p<0.05), while the significance of all interventions were appropriate, where 83.4% (n=116) of PI performed in the study period were shown to be "significant" (p<0.05). Through pharmaceutical care, the pharmacist is capable of monitoring the pharmacotherapeutic treatment and intervening when necessary, while being part of the multiprofessional team caring for the transplant patient.

Keywords