Deprescribing in Hospice Patients: Discontinuing Aspirin, Multivitamins, and Statins.

Cari E Low, Daniel E Sanchez Pellecer, Wil L Santivasi, Virginia H Thompson, Theresa Elwood, Ashly J Davidson, Julie A Tlusty, Molly A Feely, Cory Ingram
Author Information
  1. Cari E Low: Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science, Rochester, MN.
  2. Daniel E Sanchez Pellecer: Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science, Rochester, MN.
  3. Wil L Santivasi: Mayo Clinic School of Graduate Medical Education, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and Science, Rochester, MN.
  4. Virginia H Thompson: Mayo Clinic Hospice, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
  5. Theresa Elwood: Mayo Clinic Hospice, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
  6. Ashly J Davidson: Mayo Clinic Hospice, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
  7. Julie A Tlusty: Mayo Clinic Hospice, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
  8. Molly A Feely: Center for Palliative Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
  9. Cory Ingram: Center for Palliative Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To facilitate deprescribing of aspirin, multivitamins, and statins in hospice patients enrolled in Mayo Clinic Hospice, Rochester, Minnesota.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: During the fall of 2019, we conducted a quality improvement project to improve care of Mayo Clinic Hospice patients by decreasing the percentage of patients taking aspirin, multivitamins, or statins. Project interventions included the addition of a palliative medicine fellow to the hospice interdisciplinary team, nurse education, and implementation of an evidence-based deprescribing resource tool. The resource tool included a communication framework to guide deprescribing conversations and a literature summary supporting deprescribing. The project team recorded the number of patients taking 1 of these medications by intermittently surveying the hospice census. Process and counterbalance measures were tracked with online surveys of hospice nursing staff.
RESULTS: At the start of the project, 22 of 69 patients (32%) were taking aspirin, a multivitamin, or a statin. After introduction of the deprescribing resource tool and the addition of a palliative medicine fellow to the interdisciplinary team, this was reduced to 20 of 83 patients (24%), a 24% decrease. Results appeared to be driven primarily by a reduction in multivitamin use (33% decrease). Self-reported comfort and knowledge about deprescribing improved among the hospice nursing staff, as did satisfaction in their workflow from 5.4 to 6.0 (maximum, 7).
CONCLUSION: The addition of a dedicated team member to address medication issues and provision of an evidence-based deprescribing resource tool appear to reduce the use of unnecessary and potentially harmful medications in ambulatory hospice patients.

Keywords

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Word Cloud

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