Analysis of the effect of whole-course pharmaceutical intervention on clinical rational drug use in children with chronic cough
Objective To explore the effect of whole-course pharmaceutical intervention on clinical rational drug use in children with chronic cough.Methods 56 children with chronic cough were randomly selected and divided into a reference group(28 cases,routine medication guidance intervention)and a study group(28 cases,whole-course pharmaceutical intervention)by random number table method.The scores of intervention,rationality of medication,disease awareness,medication compliance and quality of life were compared between the two groups.Results After the intervention,the scores of pharmaceutical intervention quality,pharmacy service quality,drug efficacy,combination medication,consultation records,medication dosage,timing of medication,duration of medication,disease awareness,medication compliance,mental status,physiological functioning,cognitive functioning and sleep quality in the study group were(90.25±2.25),(91.35±4.25),(90.66±5.25),(90.35±2.17),(91.15±5.25),(90.63±3.12),(90.44±4.15),(90.84±4.29),(90.33±2.22),(91.73±5.15),(90.17±5.12),(90.63±3.15),(90.88±2.25)and(91.66±5.25)points,which were higher than(80.14±3.12),(81.17±5.14),(80.63±3.12),(80.36±5.15),(81.66±4.17),(81.77±5.14),(81.52±2.55),(81.64±5.25),(80.36±3.15),(81.29±3.15),(81.22±3.15),(82.26±3.26),(82.66±3.15)and(83.66±5.25)points in the reference group.The difference was significant(P<0.05).Conclusion Whole-course pharmaceutical intervention for children with chronic cough can not only significantly improve the rationality of drug use,but also significantly improve the effectiveness of intervention,optimize drug use,significantly improve the quality of life and medication safety of children.The improvement of disease awareness and medication compliance is obvious,which further indicated the value of whole-course pharmaceutical intervention in children with chronic cough.
Whole-course pharmaceutical interventionChronic cough in childrenClinical rational drug useIntervention effect