JMIR Human Factors (Nov 2021)

Including the Reason for Use on Prescriptions Sent to Pharmacists: Scoping Review

  • Kathryn Mercer,
  • Caitlin Carter,
  • Catherine Burns,
  • Ryan Tennant,
  • Lisa Guirguis,
  • Kelly Grindrod

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/22325
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
p. e22325

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundIn North America, although pharmacists are obligated to ensure prescribed medications are appropriate, information about a patient’s reason for use is not a required component of a legal prescription. The benefits of prescribers including the reason for use on prescriptions is evident in the current literature. However, it is not standard practice to share this information with pharmacists. ObjectiveOur aim was to characterize the research on how including the reason for use on a prescription impacts pharmacists. MethodsWe performed an interdisciplinary scoping review, searching literature in the fields of health care, informatics, and engineering. The following databases were searched between December 2018 and January 2019: PubMed, Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), International Pharmaceutical Abstracts (IPA), and EMBASE. ResultsA total of 3912 potentially relevant articles were identified, with 9 papers meeting the inclusion criteria. The studies used different terminology (eg, indication, reason for use) and a wide variety of study methodologies, including prospective and retrospective observational studies, randomized controlled trials, and qualitative interviews and focus groups. The results suggest that including the reason for use on a prescription can help the pharmacist catch more errors, reduce the need to contact prescribers, support patient counseling, impact communication, and improve patient safety. Reasons that may prevent prescribers from adding the reason for use information are concerns about workflow and patient privacy. ConclusionsMore research is needed to understand how the reason for use information should be provided to pharmacists. In the limited literature to date, there is a consensus that the addition of this information to prescriptions benefits patient safety and enables pharmacists to be more effective. Future research should use an implementation science or theory-based approach to improve prescriber buy-in and, consequently, adoption.