Deprescribing interventions in primary health care mapped to the Behaviour Change Wheel: a scoping review

Date

2021

Authors

Isenor, J.E.
Bai, I.
Cormier, R.
Helwig, M.
Reeve, E.
Whelan, A.M.
Burgess, S.
Martin Misener, R.
Kennie Kaulbach, N.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy, 2021; 17(7):1229-1241

Statement of Responsibility

Conference Name

Abstract

Background: Polypharmacy and inappropriate medication use are an increasing concern. Deprescribing may improve medication use through planned and supervised dose reduction or stopping of medications. As most medication management occurs in primary health care, which is generally described as the first point of access for day-to-day care, deprescribing in primary health care is the focus on this review. Objective: This scoping review aimed to identify and characterize strategies for deprescribing in primary health care and map the strategies to the Behaviour Change Wheel (BCW). Methods: A scoping review was conducted that involved searches of six databases (2002–2018) and reference lists of relevant systematic reviews and included studies. Studies that described and evaluated deprescribing strategies in primary health care were eligible. Two independent reviewers screened articles and completed data charting with charting verified by a third. Deprescribing strategies were mapped to the intervention functions of the BCW and linked to specific Behaviour Change Techniques (BCT). Results: Searches yielded 6871 citations of which 43 were included. Nineteen studies were randomized, 24 were non-randomized. Studies evaluated deprescribing in terms of medication changes, feasibility, and prescriber/patient perspectives. Deprescribing strategies involved various professionals (physicians, pharmacists, nurses), as well as patients and were generally multifaceted. A wide range of intervention functions were identified, with 41 BCTs mapped to Environmental restructuring, 38 BCTs mapped to Enablement, and 34 BCTs mapped to Persuasion. Conclusions: Deprescribing strategies in primary health care have used a variety of BCTs to address individual professionals (e.g. education) as well as strategies that addressed the practice setting, including support from additional team members (e.g. pharmacists, nurses and patients). Further research is warranted to determine comparative effectiveness of different BCTs, which can help facilitate implementation of deprescribing strategies, thereby reducing polypharmacy, in primary health care.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Data source: Supplementary data, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sapharm.2020.09.005

Access Status

Rights

Copyright 2020 Elsevier Access Condition Notes: Accepted manuscript available open access

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record