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Inappropriate prescribing: a systematic overview of published assessment tools

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Abstract

Background

Criteria to assess the appropriateness of prescriptions might serve as a helpful guideline during professional training and in daily practice, with the aim to improve a patient’s pharmacotherapy.

Objective

To create a comprehensive and structured overview of existing tools to assess inappropriate prescribing.

Method

Systematic literature search in Pubmed (1991–2013). The following properties of the tools were extracted and mapped in a structured way: approach (explicit, implicit), development method (consensus technique, expert panel, literature based), focused patient group, health care setting, and covered aspects of inappropriate prescribing.

Results

The literature search resulted in 46 tools to assess inappropriate prescribing.Twenty-eight (61%) of 46 tools were explicit, 8 (17%) were implicit and 10 (22%) used a mixed approach. Thirty-six (78%) tools named older people as target patients and 10 (22%) tools did not specify the target age group. Four (8.5%) tools were designed to detect inappropriate prescribing in hospitalised patients, 9 (19.5%) focused on patients in ambulatory care and 6 (13%) were developed for use in long-term care. Twenty-seven (59%) tools did not specify the health care setting. Consensus methods were applied in the development of 19 tools (41%), the others were based on either simple expert panels (13; 28%) or on a literature search (11; 24%). For three tools (7%) the development method was not described.

Conclusion

This overview reveals the characteristics of 46 assessment tools and can serve as a summary to assist readers in choosing a tool, either for research purposes or for daily practice use.

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Conflicts of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.

Contributions of authors statement (with relevance to the ICMJE Guidelines)

C. P. Kaufmann: Contribution to the study design and the analysis and interpretation of data, involvement in the literature search, manuscript writing, final approval of the version to be published.

R. Tremp: Contribution to the study design and the analysis and interpretation of data, conducted the literature search and the mapping of the different tools.

K.E. Hersberger: Manuscript review and final approval of the version to be published.

M.L. Lampert: Contribution to the study design and the analysis and interpretation of data, manuscript review and final approval of the version to be published

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Kaufmann, C.P., Tremp, R., Hersberger, K.E. et al. Inappropriate prescribing: a systematic overview of published assessment tools. Eur J Clin Pharmacol 70, 1–11 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00228-013-1575-8

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