The overall adherence scores to the developed MAT_STEMI and MAT_NSTEACS were 64.1% and 62.0%, respectively, indicating intermediate adherence to evidence-based guidelines for secondary prevention of CHD.
Cross-Sectional (n=66)
No
MATSTEMI and MATNSTEACS were successfully developed and validated, revealing intermediate prescribing adherence (62-64%) to secondary prevention guidelines for post-ACS patients in Kuwait.
Cardiovascular diseases are estimated to cause 46% of all mortalities in Kuwait. The aim of evidence-based clinical practice has led to an increased interest in the design of medication assessment tools (MATs) to identify deviations from evidence-based practice, and eventually provide the basis of consistent standardized prescribing. This study was designed to develop and validate MATs using quality standards extracted from international guidelines to evaluate prescribing practices in secondary prevention of coronary heart disease in patients with post-acute coronary syndrome (STEMI or NSTEACS]. International guidelines were reviewed to develop two MATs (MATSTEMI and MATNSTEACS). Face and content validity of the developed tools was performed with three MAT experts and thirteen cardiologists. Two quantitative approaches were used to determine content validity: (i) Content Validity Ratio (CVR) and the average of CVR values; and (ii) Content validity index at item level (I-CVI) and scale-level of the tool (S-CVI/Ave) with the average approach. Criteria with a CVR<0.54 and I-CVI <70% were eliminated. Ultimately, feasibility testing of both MATs was performed on 66 patients' records as a pilot study. The initial developed MATSTEMI and MATNSTEACS consisted of eighteen and twelve medication-related criteria, respectively. Face validity resulted in dividing each MAT into five dimensions. In the MATSTEMI, three criteria had CVR values < 0.54 and I-CVIs < 70%. Two criteria were eliminated and one was retained. This resulted in sixteen criteria with average CVR 0.85 and S-CVI/Ave 92.3%. In the MATNSTEACS, one criterion was eliminated. This resulted in eleven criteria with average CVR 0.93 and S-CVI/Ave 96.5%. The overall adherence scores to the MATSTEMI and MATNSTEACS were 64.1% (95% CI: 57.8-69.9%) and 62.0% (95% CI: 53.4-69.9%), respectively. It was judged as intermediate adherence for both MATs. MATSTEMI and MATNSTEACS were developed and validated to be utilized for optimizing medication therapy management and improving therapeutic interventions.
Al‐Taweel et al. (Mon,) conducted a cross-sectional in Post-acute coronary syndromes (STEMI or NSTEACS) (n=66). Medication Assessment Tools (MATs) was evaluated on Overall adherence score to MAT_STEMI (95% CI 57.8-69.9). The overall adherence scores to the developed MAT_STEMI and MAT_NSTEACS were 64.1% and 62.0%, respectively, indicating intermediate adherence to evidence-based guidelines for secondary prevention of CHD.
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