|
Optimizing Medications During Skilled Nursing Admissions Transitions from hospital to skilled nursing facilities are among the most vulnerable points in a patient’s care journey. One increasingly common challenge we see occurs when the medication list provided by the hospital does not align with the medications ordered upon arrival at the SNF. What typically happens is that the Hospital will send a list of medications that are essential to the patients recovery to a SNF who then in turn sends the list to a Pharmacy and a decision is made by individual SNF whether or not to admit the resident.
However when the patient arrives at the Nursing Home there may be an additional list of meds that the patient is used to taking prior to the hospital admission. The hospital did not mention these meds because they were not felt to be essential to the successful recovery of the patient.
So what should the Nursing Home do? The first thing is to have the Red Rock Pharmacist review the additional medications and discuss the need for these meds with the Director of Nursing and the Attending Physician. Nine times out of ten the Attending Physician will decide that the Hospital doctors know best and hold off once-starting the additional medicines.
A skilled nursing stay is typically short-term, medically complex, and goal oriented. Residents are often recovering from acute illness, surgery, or functional decline and may be experiencing pain, weakness, fatigue, nutritional challenges and reduced tolerance of side effects.
Adding non-essential medications can complicate recovery as it is introducing multiple additional variables. For example, medications such as GLP-1 receptor agonists, specialty injectables, and certain brand-name therapies can contribute to nausea, dehydration, dizziness, or weakness which may impact rehabilitation tolerance, so these residents’ regimen should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
While medication optimization is essential, it is equally important to evaluate whether every medication added at admission meaningfully supports and does not hinder the primary goals of a skilled rehabilitation stay.
The primary focus during this time is stabilization and rehabilitation to improve mobility and safely transitioning the resident to the next level of care.
So what can Nursing Homes do to optimize the medications a skilled resident is taking:
1. In addition to the essential medication list sent by the hospital, ask for a list of medicines that the resident was taking prior to hospitalization.
2. Send BOTH lists to Red Rock Pharmacy for review.
3. Your Red Rock Pharmacy will review both lists and promptly get back to you.
4. In complex situations, you may want to have your Medical Director review the Pharmacy Recommendations.
Dave Rimlinger, Director of Marketing
With Dr. Malcolm Fraser, MD, CMD Editor
|