Advantages of a Warfarin Protocol for Long-term Care Pharmacists: a Retrospective Cohort Study

Authors

  • Randall Sargent Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary; Integrated Supportive and Facility Living, Alberta Health Services; Southern Alberta Primary Care Research Network
  • Cynthia Brocklebank Pharmacy Services, Alberta Health Services
  • Helen Tam-Tham University of Calgary
  • Tyler Williamson Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary
  • Patrick Quail Integrated Supportive and Facility Living, Alberta Health Services; Southern Alberta Primary Care Research Network
  • Diana Turner Integrated Supportive and Facility Living , Alberta Health Services; Carewest
  • Neil Drummond University of Alberta, Faculty of Medicine

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5770/cgj.19.205

Keywords:

continuing care, pharmacy, warfarin, anticoagulation, international normalized ratio (INR), protocol

Abstract

Background

Warfarin is an anticoagulant prescribed to 12% of long-term care residents to reduce the risk of thrombo-embolism. This study used indicators to compare warfarin management by pharmacists to usual care.

Methods

This was a retrospective cohort study comparing a pharmacist-managed warfarin protocol with usual care of qualified warfarin recipients at long-term care facilities (two protocol, one control) in Calgary, Alberta. We compared the proportion of international normalized ratio (INR) tests in the range 2.0 to 3.0, time in range, number of tests, and frequency of bleeding at protocol and control sites. Our primary outcome, time in INR therapeutic range, is an indicator for assuring care quality. A cross-sectional survey at these sites compared health professionals’ perceptions of workload and effectiveness of warfarin management.

Results

Of the 197 residents’ charts reviewed in the study period, those on protocol had 45.0 INR tests while those on usual care had 52.7 tests (p = .034, 95% CI for the difference: 0.6 to 14.6 INR tests). No significant difference was found for time in therapeutic range, number of tests in range, or major bleeding events. Of 178 health professionals surveyed, those from protocol facilities were more satisfied with warfarin management (p = .013). Workload and safety were perceived similarly at all sites.

Interpretation

Our results suggest that a pharmacist-managed warfarin protocol is as effective as usual care and has advantages pertaining to work satisfaction, knowledge of drug interactions, consistent documentation, and fewer INR tests. Further research on teamwork and coagulation management in long-term care
facilities is recommended.

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Published

2016-04-08

How to Cite

1.
Sargent R, Brocklebank C, Tam-Tham H, Williamson T, Quail P, Turner D, Drummond N. Advantages of a Warfarin Protocol for Long-term Care Pharmacists: a Retrospective Cohort Study. Can Geriatr J [Internet]. 2016 Apr. 8 [cited 2024 Apr. 24];19(2):40-9. Available from: https://cgjonline.ca/index.php/cgj/article/view/205

Issue

Section

Original Research