YETİŞKİN EPİLEPSİ HASTALARINDA KRONİK BAKIM KALİTESİNİN DEĞERLENDİRİLMESİ
Özet
The aim of this study was to assess the
quality of chronic care provided to adult patients with epilepsy, identify clinical
pharmacy interventions for potential risks arising from inadequately delivered care
services, and evaluate the impact of clinical pharmacy services on patient outcomes.
The study was conducted prospectively in four phases between February 2022 and
June 2023 at the Neurology outpatient clinics of Hacettepe University Hospitals. In
the first period (3 months), the quality of care of 162 patients was determined
observationally with the quality indicators (QI) checklist and in the second period,
clinical pharmacy services were defined by the expert panel for potential risks that
may occur due to non-adherence with quality indicators. In the third period (12
months), 154 patients received clinical pharmacy services and the changes in seizure
frequency, medication adherence (Medication Adherence Reporting Scale, MARS),
personal impact of epilepsy on the patient (Personal Impact of Epilepsy Scale, PIES),
quality of life (Quality of Life in Epilepsy, QOLIE-10) and depression (Patient Health
Questionnaire, PHQ-9) were evaluated during the 6-month follow-up period. In the
fourth period (3 months), the QI checklist was provided to physicians and adherence
rates were re-assessed for 162 patients. In the first period, the highest adherence rates
were observed in QI-1a (96.3%) and QI-10 (100%), while the lowest compliance rates
were found in QI-7, QI-8, and QI-9. The patient education on treatment adherence,
side effect monitoring, lifestyle, and quality of life was planned as part of the clinical
pharmacy services during the expert panel meeting. Significant improvements were
detected in seizure frequency, MARS, PIES, and QOLIE-10 scores during the third
period (p<0.001). In the fourth period, it was observed that the rates of adherence to
QI-2a (p=0.032), QI-3d (p=0.012), QI-4 (p=0.001) and QI-5 (p=0.002) significantly
increased. This study shows that routine care services have low adherence to QIs, and
the importance of clinical pharmacy services developed against potential risks.