Background Ageing of the population often leads to polypharmacy. Consequently, potentially inappropriate prescribing (PIP) becomes more frequent. Systematic screening for PIP in older patients in primary care could yield a large improvement in health outcomes, possibly an important task for community pharmacists. In this article, we develop an explicit screening tool to detect relevant PIP that can be used in the typical community pharmacy practice, adapted to the European market. Methods Eleven panellists participated in a two-round RAND/UCLA (Research and Development/University of California, Los Angeles) process, including a round zero meeting, a literature review, a first written evaluation round, a second face-to-face evaluation round and, finally, a selection of those items that are applicable in the contemporary community pharmacy. Results Eighteen published lists of PIP for older patients were retrieved from the literature, mentioning 398 different items. After the two-round RAND/UCLA process, 99 clinically relevant items were considered suitable to screen for in a community pharmacy practice. A panel of seven community pharmacists selected 83 items, feasible in the contemporary community pharmacy practice, defining the final GheOP3S tool. Conclusion A novel explicit screening tool (GheOP3S) was developed to be used for PIP screening in the typical community pharmacy practice.

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doi.org/10.1093/pubmed/fdv090, hdl.handle.net/1765/96599
Journal of Public Health
Department of Internal Medicine

Tommelein, E., Petrovic, M., Somers, A., Mehuys, E., van der Cammen, T., & Boussery, K. (2016). Older patients' prescriptions screening in the community pharmacy: Development of the Ghent Older People's Prescriptions community Pharmacy Screening (GheOP3S) tool. Journal of Public Health, 38(2), e158–e170. doi:10.1093/pubmed/fdv090