Litcius/Paper detail

Medicines stewardship

Elizabeth Su, David Liew, Jane Donnelly, Rohan A. Elliott

2023Australian Prescriber13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Medicines stewardship refers to coordinated strategies and interventions to optimise medicines use, usually within a specific therapeutic area. Medicines stewardship programs can reduce variations in practice and improve patient outcomes. Therapeutic domains for medicines stewardship are chosen to address frequently used drug classes associated with a high risk of adverse outcomes. Some examples include antimicrobial, opioid analgesic, anticoagulation and psychotropic stewardship. Common elements of successful stewardship programs include multidisciplinary leadership, stakeholder engagement, tailored communication strategies, behavioural changes, implementation science methodologies, and ongoing program monitoring, evaluation and reporting. Medicines stewardship is a continual quality improvement process that requires ongoing support and resources, as well as clinician and consumer engagement, to remain sustainable. It is critical for hospital-based medicines stewardship programs to consider impacts on care in the community when making and communicating changes to patient therapy. This ensures that stewardship efforts are sustained across transitions of care.

Topics & Concepts

Stewardship (theology)Antimicrobial stewardshipPsychological interventionStakeholder engagementMedicineStakeholderMultidisciplinary approachBusinessQuality (philosophy)NursingEnvironmental planningPublic relationsPolitical scienceEpistemologyLawAntibiotic resistanceBiologyAntibioticsMicrobiologyPhilosophyPoliticsEnvironmental sciencePharmaceutical Practices and Patient OutcomesAntibiotic Use and ResistanceOpioid Use Disorder Treatment