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Providing medicines-related support for people with COPD before and after hospital discharge—a qualitative study of hospital staff perspectives

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posted on 2025-10-27, 15:42 authored by T Nygård, David WrightDavid Wright, RLS Kjome, H Nazar, A Raddum
Background: People with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) are frequently admitted to hospital and experience challenges with their medicines. Changing service delivery to address medicines-related challenges has been shown to reduce readmissions and improve patient outcomes. Before attempting to improve medicines-related support through new interventions, it is necessary to firstly understand contextual factors surrounding the delivery of current usual care. The aim was to identify improvement areas of medicines support during and after hospital discharge, and why this support is not always provided. Methods: Hospital pulmonary ward staff were included in a focus group and semi-structured interviews. Data were analysed through systematic text condensation. Results: Six major themes were developed and classified as organisational or practitioner level. Organisational level themes were: (1) transfer between care levels is challenging, (2) follow-up lacks coordination, and (3) low financial resources. Practitioner level themes were: (4) competence about COPD is needed, (5) clarification of professional role and task distribution, and (6) practitioners need to educate and support patients. Conclusions: Medicines support for people with COPD during and after discharge would benefit from undertaking medicines reconciliation and increasing coordination across care levels. Furthermore, choice of inhaler devices should not be limited by reimbursement systems. Medicines support interventions should be adapted for primary and secondary care settings or include collaboration across care levels.<p></p>

Funding

The Norwegian Foundation for Pharmacy Practice Research under grant 2020.08

History

Author affiliation

University of Leicester College of Life Sciences Healthcare

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

BMC Health Services Research

Volume

25

Issue

1

Pagination

899

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

issn

1472-6963

eissn

1472-6963

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-10-27

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

Deposited by

Professor David Wright

Deposit date

2025-10-10

Data Access Statement

Data are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.