dc.creatorSoler, Orenzio
dc.creatorBarreto, Jorge Otávio Maia
dc.date2020-06-10T12:07:15Z
dc.date2020-06-10T12:07:15Z
dc.date2019
dc.date.accessioned2023-09-26T20:52:47Z
dc.date.available2023-09-26T20:52:47Z
dc.identifierSOLER, Orenzio; BARRETO, Jorge Otávio Maia. Community-level pharmaceutical interventions to reduce the risks of polypharmacy in the elderly: overview of systematic reviews and economic evaluations. Frontiers in Pharmacology, [Lausanne], v. 10, n. 302, p. 1-10, Apr. 2019.
dc.identifier1663-9812
dc.identifierhttps://www.arca.fiocruz.br/handle/icict/41599
dc.identifier10.3389/fphar.2019.00302
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/8865487
dc.descriptionDIREB 017 FIO 16 (Fiocruz / Ministério da Saúde)
dc.descriptionBackground: Patients over 65 years of age taking multiple medications face several risks, and pharmaceutical interventions can be useful to improve quality of care and reduce those risks. However, there is still no consensus on the effectiveness of these interventions aimed at promoting changes in clinical, epidemiological, economic, and humanistic outcomes for various service delivery, organizational, financial, and implementation-based interventions. The objective of this overview of systematic reviews was to summarize evidence on the effectiveness of community-level pharmaceutical interventions to reduce the risks associated with polypharmacy in the population over 65 years of age. Method: This overview used a previously described protocol to search for systematic review articles, with and without meta-analysis, and economic evaluations, without any language or time restrictions, including articles published up to May 2018. The following databases were searched: the Cochrane Library, Epistemonikos, Health Evidence, Health Systems Evidence, Virtual Health Library, and Google Scholar. The basic search terms used were "elderly," "polypharmacy," and "pharmaceutical interventions." The findings for outcomes of interest were categorized using a taxonomy for health policies and systems. Equity-related questions were also investigated. The studies were evaluated for methodological quality and produced a narrative synthesis. Results: A total of 642 records were retrieved: 50 from Health Evidence, 197 from Epistemonikos, 194 from Cochrane, 116 from Health Systems Evidence, and 85 from the Virtual Health Library. Of these, 16 articles were selected: 1 overview of systematic reviews, 12 systematic reviews, and 3 economic evaluations. There is evidence of improvement in clinical, epidemiological, humanistic, and economic outcomes for various types of community-level pharmaceutical interventions, but differences in observed outcomes may be due to study designs, primary study sample sizes, risk of bias, difficulty in aggregating data, heterogeneity of indicators and quality of evidence included in the systematic reviews that were assessed. It is necessary to optimize the methodological designs of future primary and secondary studies. Conclusion: Community-level pharmaceutical interventions can improve various clinical, epidemiological, humanistic and economic outcomes and potentially reduce risks associated with polypharmacy in the elderly population.
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dc.languageeng
dc.publisherFrontiers Media
dc.rightsopen access
dc.subjectAged
dc.subjectPolypharmacy
dc.subjectDrug Combinations
dc.subjectElderly
dc.subjectOverview
dc.subjectPharmaceutical interventions
dc.subjectPolypharmacy
dc.subjectSystematic review
dc.subjectIdoso
dc.subjectPolimedicação
dc.subjectCombinação de Medicamentos
dc.subjectRevisão Sistemática
dc.titleCommunity-level pharmaceutical interventions to reduce the risks of polypharmacy in the elderly: overview of systematic reviews and economic evaluations
dc.typeArticle


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