Article Text
Abstract
Background Medication reviews for people transitioning from one healthcare setting to another potentially improve health outcomes, although evidence for outcome benefits varies. It is unclear when and why medication reviews performed by pharmacists in primary care for people who return from hospital to the community lead to beneficial outcomes.
Objective A realist synthesis was undertaken to develop a theory of what works, for whom, why and under which circumstances when pharmacists conduct medication reviews in primary care for people leaving hospital.
Methods The realist synthesis was performed in accordance with Realist And MEta-narrative Evidence Syntheses: Evolving Standards reporting standards. An initial programme theory informed a systematic literature search of databases (PubMed, Embase, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature, International Pharmaceutical Abstracts, OpenGrey, Trove), augmented by agency and government sources of information. Documents were synthesised by exploring interactions between contexts, intervention, outcomes and causal mechanisms.
Results The synthesis identified 9 contexts in which 10 mechanisms can be activated to influence outcomes of pharmacist medication reviews conducted in primary care postdischarge. For a medication review to take place these include trust patients have in healthcare professionals, their healthcare priorities postdischarge, capacity to participate, perceptions of benefit and effort, and awareness required by all involved. For the medication review process, mechanisms which issue an invitation to collaborate between healthcare professionals, enable pharmacists employing clinical skills and taking responsibility for medication review outcomes were linked to more positive outcomes for patients.
Conclusions Medication reviews after hospital discharge seem to work successfully when conducted according to patient preferences, programmes promote coordination and collaboration between healthcare professionals and establish trust, and pharmacists take responsibility for outcomes. Findings of this realist synthesis can inform postdischarge medication review service models.
- health services research
- medication reconciliation
- healthcare quality improvement
- pharmacists
- transitions in care
Data availability statement
All data relevant to the study are included in the article or uploaded as supplementary information, further data related to searches and screening will be available from the submitting author on request.
This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
Statistics from Altmetric.com
- health services research
- medication reconciliation
- healthcare quality improvement
- pharmacists
- transitions in care
Introduction
During the immediate period after leaving a hospital people experience heightened vulnerability and a risk of clinical deterioration.1 They may have been prescribed new medicines or changes applied to their regimen, which are intended to be temporary or permanent. A lack of, or inadequate, communication between those involved in care can contribute to adverse outcomes from medicines when transferring from one care setting to another.2 3 These factors account for only some of the problems in the delivery of healthcare but contribute to the complexity which influences the benefits or harms people can experience from the prescription and use of medicines.
In order to reduce the risk of adverse effects from medicines when people move between various healthcare settings, many governing bodies or quality agencies recommend strategies which ensure timely and accurate transfer of information and continuity of care.3 4 Pharmacists’ role in the care of people returning to primary care settings from hospital contributes to bridging information gaps, optimising outcomes and minimising harms.5 Their engagement at transitions of care ranges from performing medication reconciliation to medication reviews (MR).3 6 7 Both are supported by relatively robust evidence of avoidance of adverse events and cost reduction, mainly after patient admission into hospital, and are endorsed through healthcare standards.8–10
It is less clear what benefits can be derived for patients and health systems through medication reconciliation or MR when people transition from hospitals back to primary care. Although systematic reviews seem to show some benefit ‘on average’, for example, a reduction in medication-related problems (MRP),11 12 they have not identified a preferred, effective pharmacist-led intervention13 or established a consensus for best practice.14 This may be related to variations of how MR are executed as interventions by individual practitioners or implemented as programmes within health services. Although most jurisdictions supporting medication reconciliation or MR for people moving from hospitals into the community provide procedural guidance on how to conduct a reconciliation or review, the reality of practice introduces variations.15 16 Results from individual studies vary significantly, some indicating that MR after hospital discharge may have benefit in reducing hospital readmissions or emergency hospital visits,17–20 others casting doubt that tangible outcome benefits can be achieved21 or producing evidence of a negative effect.22 23
The majority of studies and subsequent systematic reviews focus on outcomes as a result of an MR, they provide limited detail as to how these outcomes have been achieved or explore the differing contexts that may have led to contradictory results. Adding to systematic reviews in the area,11–14 24 this realist synthesis was undertaken to clarify what works, for whom, why and under which circumstances in relation to MR performed face-to-face by pharmacists in primary care settings for people who return from hospital into the community. For the purpose of this review, the definition of MR by National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, UK, was adopted.3
Realist synthesis is a theory-driven approach to evaluating complex programmes, through an investigation of contexts, details of the intervention and identification of causal principles which explain why, for example, an MR programme works.25 26 It draws on academic and grey literature as well as policy documents, in this case relating to pharmacists providing some form of MR as an intervention in primary care for people who return from hospital into the community. The aim of the synthesis was to establish a programme theory of why, for whom, how and under which circumstances pharmacist-conducted MR succeed or fail to make differences to peoples’ health and healthcare utilisation after leaving hospital.
Methods
Realist synthesis
Realist research explores the causal links between the context in which healthcare interventions or programmes take place, in this case MR, the mechanisms which are triggered by the intervention in specific contexts and certain outcomes, which may be intermediate or final. A realist approach to data synthesis endeavours to unpack the relationships between context, mechanisms and outcomes (CMO), providing an explanatory account and programme theory of why an intervention or programme achieves what it does.27 As outlined previously, a realist approach to analysis will provide greater insight compared with existing systematic reviews examining when a pharmacist conducted MR after leaving hospital is likely to be successful.
Research questions
To support the generation of programme theory the following research questions were formulated using a Context-Intervention-Mechanism-Outcome (CIMO) framework.28
Context: what are the contexts in which a pharmacist-conducted MR may create an outcome benefit for patients after moving from hospital to primary care?
Intervention: what are the exact details of an MR performed by pharmacists in primary care for people who have been discharged from hospital as described in the literature?
Mechanism: what are the context-specific mechanisms which are likely to contribute to outcome benefits?
Outcome: what are the outcomes (related to C&M) achieved by pharmacist-conducted MR in primary care postdischarge?
The synthesis was registered on PROSPERO (2019 CRD42019123825) and conducted by implementing practical guidance to realist research25 29 and applying Realist And MEta-narrative Evidence Syntheses: Evolving Standards (RAMESES) quality standards for publication of realist reviews.30
Development of initial programme theory
Scoping of the literature (based on prior knowledge by the research team and a PubMed search) facilitated the development of an initial programme theory around MR for people who move from hospitals to primary care. Documents which used the terms medication review, hospital discharge and community pharmacy were surveyed initially. At this point, literature was not analysed in depth nor data extracted, but was read for an overview and description of the medication review process to inform the generation of an initial programme theory. Documents were examined to identify any contexts and potential mechanisms which may explain when, why and how the MR process works for people who have left hospital. Regular discussions and comparisons of notes made on documents revealed the general assumptions underlying an MR, which are that pharmacists are skilled at identifying problems with medicines, including MRPs or prescriber, health system and patient-related issues and then identify and recommend appropriate solutions to these problems.4 As a result of identifying contexts and outcomes of interest, the process of medication review was separated into three steps to break down some of its inherent complexity. First, the MR had to be initiated or ‘made’ to happen, then the actual MR itself performed by a pharmacist and the last step considers what occurs after the MR has been performed. The initial programme theory with contextual and interventional factors which were hypothesised to influence these three steps are described in online supplemental appendix 1.
Supplemental material
Data collection for realist synthesis
After designing and trialling the most appropriate search strategies in collaboration with a specialist librarian, a systematic search of PubMed, EMBASE, International Pharmaceutical Abstracts and Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature was performed in December 2018. Alerts for new articles which fit the search terms were set in PubMed, to facilitate timely additions of new publications during the synthesis, and the original search was repeated in February 2020. A start date was not set, as most relevant studies were conducted after the year 2000 but relevant discussion and policy documents possibly published earlier. Search strategies for each database are detailed in the supplementary materials (online supplemental appendix 2). OpenGrey and Trove databases were searched for grey literature as were the websites of pharmacy organisations and relevant government agencies in the UK, the USA, Canada and Australia. The focus of this realist synthesis was on MR performed by pharmacists working in community practice or primary care settings (eg, community pharmacy, general practice, community clinic), with no limitations to review locations. MR conducted in a hospital setting were excluded. Narrowing the scope of the review, searches did not include terms of ‘transition of care’ to minimise capturing MR performed by pharmacists working in hospital settings. Documents describing medication reconciliation were included if this was not the sole intervention. Programme evaluation reports were identified to add conceptual and contextual richness.
Supplemental material
At times, the terms medication reconciliation and MR were used interchangeably or loosely in studies and reports, for thoroughness medication reconciliation as well as MR review articles were screened for further relevant studies.5 8 11–14 24 31 32 Backward and forward reference tracking of included articles was performed and sibling papers identified. Multiple papers or reports could be related to the same original study and reported in conference abstracts, full research reports, evaluation reports, and trial protocols which often outline the underlying assumptions of how the programme under investigation is supposed to work.
Two members of the research team (KL, MJT) screened titles and abstracts for inclusion for full-text review. All three authors then read a proportion of full-texts, with a random overlap between each, which ensured 15% of full-texts were screened by all researchers. Any discrepancies in screening were resolved through regular discussion. In line with realist approaches to data collection any publication or document with potential to inform the generation of programme theories was considered, this included policies and procedures of established MR programmes. A conventional quality appraisal of studies was not performed but all documents were assessed for their relevance, trustworthiness and rigour. An assessment of rigour was made by examining whether the methods used to generate data were appropriate to answer the research questions, were employed with fidelity and consistency and could credibly produce presented results. Trustworthiness of data was established by assessing whether they had been empirically obtained and cross-examining outcomes of similar studies. Documents were regarded as relevant if they were deemed to contribute to the development of programme theory or disputed it, with relevance at times shifting depending on the developmental phase of theory. For documents which seemed highly relevant but lacked adequate detail, authors were contacted to obtain clarification and additional detail to support judgements of trustworthiness and rigour.29
Data analysis
Based on the research questions framed via CIMO, literature and factors considered in the initial programme theory data were extracted from the finally included articles, as described in table 1, and considered in conjunction with extractions of texts from included documents as well as interpretive and reflective notes researchers kept on all included documents.27 28 33 All data were managed using Microsoft Excel.
Outcomes were categorised into proximal and distal, contexts were themed into relevant subcategories and mechanisms initially inferred, before refinement of both during the synthesis.
Data synthesis and refining programme theory
Causal links, contexts, mechanisms and outcomes were then configured iteratively into CMO configurations (CMOCs) to refine the programme theory through regular discussions by the research team. Working backwards from outcomes started the generation of CMOCs, followed by interpretation of extracted data and author notes in relation to contexts and/or mechanisms. Contexts were examined for significance to each of the three stages and synthesised after ascertaining which outcomes they linked to. Some mechanisms were inferred to start with, as they often were not articulated clearly or remained hidden until relevant data from all included documents had been examined. In addition, the relationships between contexts, mechanisms and outcomes were established within a specific and across all documents. Once a COMC was established, all documents were iteratively scrutinised for confirmation or disconfirmation. This process identified the presence and an absence of mechanisms as triggers for outcomes and CMOCs were formulated in positive and negative terms.
CMOCs were then examined for demi-regularities and abstracted to establish mid-range theories. An additional literature search for more general studies and documents on MR as well as substantive theory was performed to adjudicate and confirm mechanisms and the final programme theory.
Results
Sixty-six documents were included, as described in the flow chart for their identification and selection in figure 1 and listed in online supplemental appendix 3.
Supplemental material
Of the 33 primary studies which were reported in conference abstracts, trial protocols, journal articles and evaluation reports, 13 were conducted in the UK,20 23 34–44 10 in the USA,18 19 45–52 6 in Australia,17 22 53–56 3 in the Netherlands57–59 and 1 in Canada.21 Multiple papers or reports could be related to the same original study. Findings were reported for 16 distinct studies of MR performed by pharmacists in community pharmacies18–21 34–44 50 (described in 22 articles), 15 involved home visits17 22 23 46 47 49 51–59 (described in 32 articles) and 2 in-clinic review.45 48 Outcome measures are described in table 2.
Fourteen studies reported patient-focused outcomes, for example, readmission rates, visits to emergency departments rather than the identification or rate of resolving MRPs. Seven of those showed positive outcomes or trends in reducing hospital readmissions or other healthcare utilisation,17–20 45 46 60 four showed no differences between intervention and control groups21 35 47 48 and three reported increases in hospital admissions or other healthcare utilisation for the intervention group.22 23 57 61
Contexts which were identified as potentially influencing outcomes are described in table 3.
Many studies provided limited detail on the intervention. When it was based on an existing MR programme, relevant policies and procedures were consulted for further guidance and detail, for example, for Medication Utilisation Reviews (MUR) in the UK, MedsCheck in Ontario and the Home Medicine Review (HMR) programme in Australia.62–64
Only two aspects of the intervention seemed to consistently trigger mechanisms which facilitated favourable outcomes, these were the degrees of active problem solving by the pharmacist and mode and degree of communication with other healthcare providers. Other aspects, for example, timing of the MR, credentialing or specific training received by pharmacists, seemed to be of little relevance.
Numerous mechanisms were identified as causal processes generating outcomes when activated within the various contexts, as listed in table 4.
Finally, CMOCs, which were constructed in positive and negative terms, describing outcomes when mechanisms were present in a particular context versus their absence, are detailed in table 5.
The contribution of the individual CMOCs to the overall programme theory is detailed below, separated into the steps of an MR as outlined previously.
Step 1: what makes an MR happen?
The first step to the success of any intervention or programme is the engagement of the intended participants, in this case patients (and their carers), pharmacists, doctors and other healthcare professionals (HCPs). Information on demi-regularities explaining which contexts and mechanisms are likely to be in place for an MR to happen in the first place was easily obtainable. The following CMOCs relate to ‘what makes an MR happen’:
For patients:
Patient recruitment
Patients were generally amenable to considering an MR after leaving hospital, in most studies 60%–70% of those approached in hospital agreed to participate, when approached by designated personnel.17–19 53 65 66A specific role for recruitment was more commonly assigned in hospitals and contingent on the study design gave recruiters a mandate, encouraging them to take responsibility. Recruitment in community pharmacies was less successful when added on to other roles.37 42 Patients consented to MR when recruited by HCPs they knew, trusting their recommendation.17 53 65 However, reliance on referrals by doctors significantly reduced the reach of potential patients compared with hospital or community pharmacy initiated MR processes, unless the referral process was highly coordinated and supported, linking to CMOC 7.53 65–67 A combination of starting recruitment in hospital and follow-up by those involved in the actual MR process seemed to maximise patient engagement.18 53 65 These findings are abstracted into the following CMOCs:
CMOCs 1: when patients are offered an MR in a healthcare environment they are likely to consent because they trust the HCP recommending the MR.
When recruitment of patients to an MR is supported by an organisation, for example in hospital, recruitment rates increase because ‘recruiters’ have a mandate and take responsibility for identifying and consenting patients.
Patient experience
Particularly during the early implementation of MR programmes, patients were unfamiliar with pharmacists’ extended and clinical roles and lacked trust in pharmacists’ skill.36 68 In addition, patients’ perception of little benefit and low positive outcome expectancy of an MR are mechanisms reducing patients’ willingness to participate.36 46 53 69 70
CMOC 2: depending on patients’ experience and attitudes to pharmacists’ clinical roles, acceptance of an MR referral and participation increases if patients perceive a benefit from a pharmacist-led MR and/or trust the pharmacist’s skill.
For pharmacists and other HCPs:
Healthcare professional awareness
HCPs, in particular pharmacists and doctors, had to gain familiarity with MR programmes. Referrals to and/or uptake of MR increased with awareness and familiarity because of increasing recognition of pharmacists’ clinical and professional role and changing perceptions of patients’ benefit from an MR.49 51 57 65 66 These mechanisms were confirmed by observation or low referral and/or uptake of MR in their absence.37–39 53 71–73
CMOC 3: when MR programmes and systems have raised HCPs’ awareness and experience, referral and uptake increase because they recognise pharmacists’ professional role and may perceive a benefit of pharmacist-conducted MR for patients.
Role integration
Interlinking with the previous CMOCs additional factors influencing pharmacists’ uptake of MR were observed. Organisational, policy and procedural support had to be in place before pharmacists integrated MR into routine practice. The legitimisation of their professional, clinical roles created a mandate to perform MR and a positive perception of their professional standing.18–21 45 48 53 57 Policies and formalised MR programmes also signal to pharmacists (and other HCPs) that MR is of benefit to patients. When pharmacists did not accept MR as a professional responsibility and doubted benefits to patients, MR were not incorporated into their practice.40 42
CMOC 4: when systems and organisational structures support MR and facilitate role integration pharmacists undertake them as routine practice because they accept it as part of their professional role and perceive a benefit for patients and their own professional standing.
Location of MR
Despite prescreening, many patients were unable to access the location of the MR or relied on carers for access to appointments due to poor mobility and morbidity, leading to attrition rates of 50% or higher after recruitment.18–20 40 41 50 72 74 75 Most programmes are inflexible about the location for postdischarge MRs, for example, community pharmacies for discharge MUR and MedsChecks, homes when leveraging HMR programmes. Although not all patients feel comfortable attending an MR conducted by a pharmacist they do not know or welcome a pharmacist into their home,52 participation increased when accessing the location required little effort.17 23 76 Patients declined participation when the location of the MR did not meet their preferences, which was often the case for community pharmacy-based programmes.37 38 40 41 52 74 75
CMOC 5: when the location of the MR is flexible patients are more likely to participate because their preferences in terms of accessibility, acceptability and convenience are met and less effort is required.
Life after hospital
Patients preferences and priorities changed once they were home, when they had to reorganise their lives and juggle multiple appointments.53 77 Patients participated (scheduled and attended) an MR when perceived benefits outweighed their health and other priorities and effort required to attend,37 but frequently that balance did not tilt in favour of the MR.18 19 37 50 51 53 78
CMOC 6: when life after hospital has to be reorganised, patients may or may not schedule and attend MR appointments because they weigh their priorities and effort against perceptions of benefit differently.
Steps 2 and 3: what happens and what happens next?
Details on contexts, interventions and mechanisms describing what happens during the MR process and after the MR was performed were more limited, therefore CMOCs outlining these two steps were combined. Mechanisms identified for the three CMOCs generated outcomes along a continuum of activation, the stronger mechanisms were activated and the more of them were present, the more likely positive outcomes were achieved. The following CMOCs relate to the MR process: ‘what happens during and after the MR’. They frequently acted interdependently, with CMOC 7 creating favourable conditions for CMOCs 1, 3, 8 and 9 to develop successfully, and CMOC 8 particularly linked to CMOC 9.
Communication and networks
Community pharmacists who were supposed to undertake the MR often were not aware patients had left the hospital.39 42 44 Independently of the location where the MR was undertaken and how patients had been engaged, communication within networks and inviting pharmacist collaboration increased awareness and performance of MRs.18–20 46 48 57–59 79 80 An invitation to collaborate, either through a referral from a prescriber to the pharmacist or the pharmacist contacting prescribers to inform them of their involvement or a discussion of MR findings, initiated degrees of shared care for a patient and resulted in higher referral53 65–67 and participation rates17 48 53 65 and achieved positive patient outcomes.17 45 48
CMOC 7: because it reduces the effort for those involved in the MR process and invites their collaboration, communication and coordination increase the likelihood of doctors referring, patients and pharmacists scheduling/performing MR and facilitates reductions in MRPs or readmissions to hospital.
Available information
Information available to pharmacists before and during the MR varied between studies, partially dependent on regulation and standards, from a hospital discharge medication letter to comprehensive referrals including relevant clinical information. A referral from a doctor constituted an invitation to collaborate, facilitating sharing of or requests for information.45 60 65 When pharmacists had access to adequate relevant information they were enabled to identify most MRPs or patient-related problems as well as strategies to resolve these, either by action or recommendation.17–19 45 48 60 65 When only medication information was available, pharmacists were hindered in identifying clinically relevant issues and identifying or enacting appropriate strategies to resolve them.22 23 57 75 77 80
CMOC 8: when pharmacists either receive, or are able to easily access, comprehensive and relevant clinical information about patients, MR achieves positive outcomes because they are enabled to recognise more relevant issues and make recommendations to resolve them.
Regulations and standards
While governance of MR programmes influence how pharmacists’ can address issues they identify, they allow for flexibility and discretion in taking action. Pharmacists conducting MR as a holistic clinical assessment, at times including social considerations, and taking responsibility for outcomes achieved significantly higher rates of MRP resolution and patient-focused outcomes, for example, reductions in readmissions,17–19 46 48 compared with identifying MRPs, making recommendations only and leaving the solving of problems to someone else without follow-up.22 23 57–59 75 80
CMOC 9: better outcomes are achieved when standards for MR facilitate pharmacists taking responsibility for solving issues identified during the MR, either themselves, in collaboration with the patient, or ensuring prescribers resolve any issues they could not address.
The predominant absence of the enabling mechanisms of the three CMOCs described above was particularly observed in the three studies with detrimental outcomes, that is, an increase in hospital admissions, where a pharmacist, without access to comprehensive information about patients was ‘parachuted in’ to undertake an MR and/or sent a medication list and additional reporting notes to the doctor without two-way communication or formalised follow-up.22 23 57
The final programme theory and connections between CMOCs is depicted in figure 2.
Discussion
This realist synthesis of MR performed by pharmacists in primary care for people who have left hospital provides insight into which contexts have potential to influence outcomes and which mechanisms have to be activated to achieve positive outcomes for all participants. Policies, standards, systems and organisational structures link to contexts which raise HCPs’ awareness of MR, provide a mandate to recruit and perform MR and contribute to role integration for pharmacists. They also influence communication, collaboration and networks positively.
These more or less generic conditions seem necessary but are insufficient in achieving patient-focused outcomes. The following discussion will focus on the specific findings with most potential to inform further shaping of MR programmes and their implementation.
Patient recruitment and participation
Patients are likely to perceive benefit from an MR differently than HCPs, framing it according to their needs and preferences will increase their participation. Deducing from what does not work, increased flexibility for the reviewing pharmacist to conduct the MR at a location and time which suits patients’ preferences and capacity will ensure that those who perceive benefit and may benefit are receiving an MR. Compelling evidence for a particular time frame in which the MR achieves outcome benefit is so far lacking, flexibility and meeting preferences in combination with factors discussed below seem of greater importance.
Establishment of trust
Doctors, who in many MR programmes are asked to implement pharmacists’ MR recommendations, have to perceive a benefit for their patients and trust the pharmacist’s professional expertise. As ‘trust pertains to relationships with specific others over specific matters’81 (italics in original), pharmacists cannot assume they are inherently regarded as trustworthy and will have to build trust through communication and invitations to collaborate.
When implementing MR programmes patients and HCPs have to gain trust into the pharmacists’ clinical role and skills, and perceive a benefit for an MR. Trust in pharmacists can be conferred by a HCP patients already trust, with doctors in particular exerting significant positive social influence over the willingness to use a medication management service.82
Communication, coordination, collaboration and networks
Communication and coordination between participating HCPs and patients increases the likelihood of participation and positive outcomes because it reduces required effort to engage in the MR process. Invitations to collaborate between HCPs, for example, doctors and pharmacists, enhance collaboration and information sharing. Availability of clinical information has previously been hypothesised as a factor influencing outcomes for an MR in a positive manner.5 The more pertinent detail pharmacists have access to the more enabled they seemingly are to employ their clinical skill and identify MRPs, social issues and other patient factors which may contribute to negative outcomes. MR programmes have to ensure the quality and relevance of information pharmacists receive before or can collect during an MR.
Pharmacists taking responsibility
The manner in which issues are consequently addressed influence whether positive outcomes are achieved. Lower reductions in MRPs and no changes in healthcare utilisation were observed when pharmacists sent reports unsolicited or unannounced to prescribers or did not follow-up on their MR findings with patients or reports to doctors, confirming that an underlying mechanism of initiating or established collaboration comes into play. A patient-focused approach and follow-up care has previously been suggested to enhance the effectiveness of MR.83 Pharmacists resolving issues they can resolve themselves with patients, for example, access to medicines, adherence, understanding, social support, increases the chances of success, and ideally is encouraged by policies and systems surrounding MR programmes.
The term ‘review’ unfortunately implies ‘the act of considering something in order to make changes to it, give an opinion or appraise it’. We hypothesise that when pharmacists moved from providing only an opinion, assessment or consult to collaborative problem solving because they took responsibility for the outcome of the postdischarge MR they performed, positive outcomes were more likely for people leaving hospital.
Strength and limitations
A strength of this synthesis is the inclusion of recent research in the area of post-discharge MR.
Many included studies reported outcomes which were not necessarily patient-focused and provided limited detail on contexts and potential mechanisms.
Issues with patients’ capacity to access the MR point to limitations of studies where patients who agreed to participate in an MR when approached in hospital but could not be contacted after their return home were allocated into the usual care or control group. Any differences in outcomes might have partly been a function of patients’ capacity to attend the MR compared with those who did not attend, for example, related to lesser morbidity and higher mobility, being more engaged or self-efficacious in their healthcare, rather than attributable solely to the MR.19 20 84 It is also plausible that some of these usual care group patients were not contactable due to readmission into hospital shortly after their previous discharge.75
The intervention, in this case the MR either as a process or programme, was often not described in a way to assist a realist approach, for example, detail was limited20 21 47 or too complex or multifaceted41 57–59 to understand with certainty which components were essential to achieving a positive outcome.
Available data allow confidence in theory of what makes an MR happen, particularly in the early phases of MR programme implementation, for example, why and how stakeholders engage in the MR process or not. Due to the above limitations, the programme theory relating to tangible outcomes of MR developed via this realist synthesis still has to be tested.
Conclusions
This realist synthesis provides guidance for the future development of service models in which pharmacists provide MR in primary care for people who have left hospital. In order to make it a successful health service multiple, interacting elements need to be in place. Programmes which offer flexibility in MR location and timing, are attuned to patients’ priorities and preferences and facilitate coordination and information exchange between all participants increase uptake and participation. Coordination and collaboration between HCPs and pharmacists taking responsibility for MR outcomes seem to create conditions in which the MR leads to patient-relevant outcomes, for example, reductions in hospital readmissions. This synthesis provides a basis for future (realist) evaluations examining MR in general and for people who have left hospital to strengthen and confirm the proposed causal explanations.
Data availability statement
All data relevant to the study are included in the article or uploaded as supplementary information, further data related to searches and screening will be available from the submitting author on request.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank stakeholders and authors of original articles for discussions and clarifications.
References
Supplementary materials
Supplementary Data
This web only file has been produced by the BMJ Publishing Group from an electronic file supplied by the author(s) and has not been edited for content.
Footnotes
Contributors KL and MJT conceived the study. KL, MJT and DR undertook abstract and full-text screening. KL undertook data extraction. All authors performed the synthesis. KL drafted the manuscript, all authors revised the manuscript critically for intellectual content and agreed and approved the final version to be published. Disagreements were resolved by regular discussion until all authors reached consensus.
Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
Supplemental material This content has been supplied by the author(s). It has not been vetted by BMJ Publishing Group Limited (BMJ) and may not have been peer-reviewed. Any opinions or recommendations discussed are solely those of the author(s) and are not endorsed by BMJ. BMJ disclaims all liability and responsibility arising from any reliance placed on the content. Where the content includes any translated material, BMJ does not warrant the accuracy and reliability of the translations (including but not limited to local regulations, clinical guidelines, terminology, drug names and drug dosages), and is not responsible for any error and/or omissions arising from translation and adaptation or otherwise.