• Farm Hosp · Jul 2020

    Survey on the situation of telepharmacy as applied to the outpatient care in hospital pharmacy departments in Spain during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    • Begoña Tortajada-Goitia, Ramón Morillo-Verdugo, Luis Margusino-Framiñán, José Antonio Marcos, and Cecilia M Fernández-Llamazares.
    • Pharmacy and Nutrition Area, Agencia Sanitaria Costa del Sol, Marbella (Málaga). Spain.. btortaj@gmail.com.
    • Farm Hosp. 2020 Jul 1; 44 (4): 135-140.

    ObjectiveTo analyze the status of the implementation and development of  telepharmacy as applied to the pharmaceutical care of outpatients treated at  hospital pharmacy services in Spain during the COVID-19 pandemic.MethodSix weeks after the beginning of the confinement period, an online 10- question survey was sent to all members of the Spanish Society of Hospital  Pharmacists. A single response per hospital was requested. The survey included  questions on the provision of remote pharmaceutical care prior to the onset of  the health crisis, patient selection criteria, procedures for home delivery of  medications and the means used to deliver them, the number of patients who  benefited from telepharmacy, and the number of referrals made. Finally,  respondents were asked whether a teleconsultation was carried out before  sending patients their medication and whether these deliveries were recorded.ResultsA total of 39.3% (n = 185) of all the hospitals in the National Health  System (covering all of Spain's autonomous regions) responded to the survey.  Before the beginning of the crisis, 83.2% (n = 154) of hospital pharmacy  services did not carry out remote pharmaceutical care activities that included  telepharmacy with remote delivery of medication. During the study period,  119,972 patients were treated, with 134,142 deliveries of medication being  completed. Most hospitals did not use patient selection criteria. A total of 30.2%  of hospitals selected patients based on their personal circumstances. Home  delivery and informed delivery (87%; 116,129 deliveries) was the option used in most cases. The means used to deliver the medication mainly included the use  of external courier services (47.0%; 87 hospitals) or the hospital's own transport services (38.4%; 71 hospitals). As many as 87.6% of hospitals carried out  teleconsultations prior to sending out medications and 59.6% recorded their  telepharmacy activities in the hospital pharmacy appointments record.ConclusionsThe rate of implementation of telepharmacy in outpatient care in  Spain during the study period in the pandemic was high. This made it possible to guarantee the continuity of care for a large number of patients.Copyright AULA MEDICA EDICIONES 2014. Published by AULA MEDICA. All rights reserved.

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