CPC London 2025 - Poster Zone Awards - Vote for your favourite

These are all of the Poster's which have been selected to display at Clinical Pharmacy Congress 2025 - You can vote for your favourite poster during the event only!

The top three posters with the most votes will be recognised at the Poster Zone Awards Ceremony, taking place on Saturday 10 May at 3pm in the Showcase Theatre. Whether you're presenting or voting, the Poster Zone is an unmissable part of your Congress experience.

Saturday 10th - Morning
Abstract Title
An evaluative project of a ward-based pharmacist working within an MDT as part of a ‘Reablement & Frailty’ speciality unit
Background and Introduction
Reablement care aims to prevent hospital re-admissions, costly institutional placements, and increase quality of life for frail patients, as well as preventing long-term decisions being made prematurely based on the patient’s current state of health. Pharmacist involvement in multi-disciplinary teams (MDT) across other specialities has been demonstrated extensively worldwide as effective in reducing medication errors and providing significant improvements to patient care. However, little research has been conducted specifically within a reablement & frailty setting, and the subsequent impact on the scale and quality of care provided to patients.
Aims and Objectives
Aim Identify the responsibilities of a ward-based pharmacist working within a ‘reablement & frailty’ MDT and evaluate the subsequent impact on patient care by categorising and quantifying the significance of pharmacist interventions and contributions. Objectives Categorise and quantify the significance of pharmacist contributions including clinical interventions, provision of advice or answering queries (consults) and enhancing medicine regimens to improve efficacy of therapy (medicines optimisation), using previously validated severity and intervention scoring scales. Categorise and quantify the significance of Structured Medication Review (SMR) contributions such as pharmacist recommendations and patient-agreed outcomes, using previously validated severity and intervention scoring scales.
Method
A three-stage, quantitative service evaluation project: 1. Development of two data collection tools (DCTs) to capture responsibilities: one for clinical interventions/recommendations and one for structured medication reviews; 2. Collection of daily interventions on 18-bed reablement unit over 13 days by ward pharmacist using DCTs; 3. Scoring of each intervention based on two adapted, previously validated scales: I. Severity score – potential severity of harm to patient if contribution was missed (clinically insignificant, significant, serious, life-threatening) II. Intervention score – likelihood of contribution preventing re-admission - scale of 1-3 (1 - no likelihood, 2 - possible likelihood, 3 - high likelihood)
Results
A total of 88 clinical contributions were made and collected over the 3-day pilot and 10-day data collection period, averaging just under seven contributions per day. Two ‘life-threatening’ interventions were made, both with a high likelihood of preventing a hospital re-admission. Based on potential severity of harm, most entries were scored as ‘significant’ (67%, n=59), followed by ‘serious’ (16%, n=14). Just over half of all clinical interventions (52%, n=46) scored as having either a possible OR high likelihood to prevent a hospital re-admission. The ward doctor actioned 94% (n = 73) of the pharmacist’s recommendations.
Authors and affiliation
Mr Youles, D. Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen, Scotland
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