4.2 Review

Interventions to reduce benzodiazepine and sedative-hypnotic drug use in acute care hospitals: A scoping review

Journal

RESEARCH IN SOCIAL & ADMINISTRATIVE PHARMACY
Volume 18, Issue 5, Pages 2874-2886

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.sapharm.2021.07.004

Keywords

Benzodiazepine; Sedative-hypnotic; Hospital; Intervention

Funding

  1. Dalhousie University Pharmacy Endowment Fund

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This scoping review identified various interventions aimed at reducing the utilization of BZD/SHD in hospitals. Multifaceted interventions targeting both patients and healthcare providers, including education, sleep protocols, and deprescribing, may support reductions in BZD/SHD use.
Background: Benzodiazepines and sedative-hypnotic drugs (BZD/SHD) are commonly utilized in the acute care setting for insomnia and anxiety and are associated with cognitive impairment, falls, and fractures. Interventions to reduce use of BZD/SHD in hospitals are not well characterized. Objective: The objective was to conduct a scoping review to identify and characterize interventions to reduce the use of BZD/SHD by adults in the acute care setting. Methods: English language studies and abstracts that described an intervention to reduce BZD/SHD in adult hospital patients were included. Six databases (PubMed, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Scopus, and Web of Science) were searched up to July 2018 and updated to February 3, 2021. The grey literature (Opengrey, Grey Matters, Google Advanced) was searched up to July 2018. Titles and abstracts were screened and full-text articles were reviewed and charted by three independent reviewers. Stakeholders were consulted to inform the scoping review and collect perspectives on the findings. Results: There were 13,046 records identified and 43 studies included. The most common study designs were uncontrolled before and after (23/43, 53.5%) and randomized controlled trials (7/43, 16.3%). The majority of studies tested a single intervention (32/43, 74.4%) such as education, deprescribing, relaxation training and sleep protocols. Patients were frequently the target of relaxation training and behavior change interventions; while sleep protocols, multifaceted interventions, education and deprescribing were usually directed at healthcare providers, either alone or in combination with patients. Most studies reported positive results in decreasing BZD/SHD use (27/43, 62.8%). Conclusions: The scoping review found a variety of interventions to decrease the utilization of BZD/SHD in hospitals. Multifaceted interventions aimed at patients and healthcare providers that include a combination of education, sleep protocols, and deprescribing may support reductions in BZD/SHD use. Stakeholders also recommended policy and system changes such as computer alerts due to feasibility and workload.

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