Yorkshire at forefront in helping older patients manage medicines safely to reduce hospital admissions

Experts in Yorkshire are helping frail elderly people manage multiple medicines safely in groundbreaking research to help cut hospital admissions for the NHS.
Experts in Yorkshire are helping frail elderly people manage multiple medicines safely to help cut hospital admissions for the NHS.Experts in Yorkshire are helping frail elderly people manage multiple medicines safely to help cut hospital admissions for the NHS.
Experts in Yorkshire are helping frail elderly people manage multiple medicines safely to help cut hospital admissions for the NHS.

The Yorkshire-led £156,000 project will run for two years and is funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR).

It is being run through the NIHR Yorkshire and Humber Patient Safety Translational Research Centre and the Wolfson Centre for Applied Health Research, with a team of experts from the University of Bradford, Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust and the University of Leeds.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Project lead Dr Beth Fylan, from the University of Bradford, said the potential impact of the research is vital as nearly 12 million people in the UK are over 65 and of those, around half suffer from more than one chronic condition, usually requiring them to take multiple medicines over a long period of time.

Pictured, project lead Dr Beth Fylan, from the University of Bradford. Photo credit: The University of Bradford.Pictured, project lead Dr Beth Fylan, from the University of Bradford. Photo credit: The University of Bradford.
Pictured, project lead Dr Beth Fylan, from the University of Bradford. Photo credit: The University of Bradford.

Older people are also more likely to experience avoidable adverse drug events.

Dr Fylan said: “Frail older people’s medicines regimens are often extremely complicated and it requires significant work to manage them safely.

“When older people aren’t supported to do this, they may be more likely to be admitted into hospital or suffer a fall from which they can find it hard to recover, leading to a downward spiral.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“Our aim is to help them manage things better, so they never enter that cycle.”

Experts in Yorkshire are helping frail elderly people manage multiple medicines safely. Photo credit: The University of Bradford.Experts in Yorkshire are helping frail elderly people manage multiple medicines safely. Photo credit: The University of Bradford.
Experts in Yorkshire are helping frail elderly people manage multiple medicines safely. Photo credit: The University of Bradford.

Rather than unpicking the causes of poor medicines management after something has gone wrong, the project aims to take a different approach, using a resilient healthcare framework.

The team – involving academics, clinicians and patients at the University of Bradford, Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, the University of Leeds and Doncaster Clinical Commissioning Group – will work with eight GP practices across Yorkshire and Humber.

The project will identify the safe and successful strategies older people and their carers can use to manage their medicines, including how they respond to changes in their own health and anticipate problems such as mistakes in repeat prescriptions.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The researchers aim to design an intervention with patients and healthcare staff to help others achieve similar success.

Dr Fylan said: “It’s important that solutions are designed jointly by staff, carers and patients as each group has an important perspective on the challenges faced."

The initiative will focus on people over 65 who are taking multiple medicines and are categorised as mildly or moderately ‘frail’. This means they have a range of symptoms, such as hearing loss and tremors, and health conditions, such as heart disease or arthritis, all of which make them more vulnerable.

Patients and carers will be interviewed to understand the strategies they use and how the healthcare system supports or hinders these. Extracts from these interviews will be made into a short film that will be shown at workshops with healthcare staff, patients and carers to trigger thoughts, ideas and discussion about the issues raised.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Participants in the workshops will help identify the most important ideas to take forward, based on all the evidence presented and develop prototype interventions.

Dr Fylan added: “It’s a fascinating process to be part of – you can never predict what might come out of it. It could be as varied as a toolkit for patients to use at home or a ‘buddy scheme’ providing peer support to give patients and carers more confidence to talk to healthcare staff about any problems.”

The interventions identified through the workshops will then be tested in focus groups – again comprising healthcare staff, patients and carers – to see how easily they would be accepted by patients and their feasibility.

_____________________________

Editor’s note: first and foremost - and rarely have I written down these words with more sincerity - I hope this finds you well.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Almost certainly you are here because you value the quality and the integrity of the journalism produced by The Yorkshire Post’s journalists - almost all of which live alongside you in Yorkshire, spending the wages they earn with Yorkshire businesses - who last year took this title to the industry watchdog’s Most Trusted Newspaper in Britain accolade.

And that is why I must make an urgent request of you: as advertising revenue declines, your support becomes evermore crucial to the maintenance of the journalistic standards expected of The Yorkshire Post. If you can, safely, please buy a paper or take up a subscription. We want to continue to make you proud of Yorkshire’s National Newspaper but we are going to need your help.

Postal subscription copies can be ordered by calling 0330 4030066 or by emailing [email protected]. Vouchers, to be exchanged at retail sales outlets - our newsagents need you, too - can be subscribed to by contacting subscriptions on 0330 1235950 or by visiting www.localsubsplus.co.uk where you should select The Yorkshire Post from the list of titles available.

If you want to help right now, download our tablet app from the App / Play Stores. Every contribution you make helps to provide this county with the best regional journalism in the country.

Sincerely. Thank you.

James Mitchinson

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.