Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a health communication campaign designed to reduce the rate of serious warfarin-related drug interactions. The B-SAFE campaign was conducted in 2009 to educate patients located in a Michigan hospital’s service area about the risk of serious adverse drug events associated with warfarin. The rate of warfarin-related drug interactions among Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) patients admitted to the exposed hospital with hemorrhagic complications was compared with the rate of warfarin-related drug interactions among a similar cohort admitted to a control hospital before and after the campaign. The χ2 test and logistic regression were used to analyze differences. The authors observed a marginally significant decline in the rate of warfarin-related drug interactions (odds ratio [OR] = 0.66; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.33-1.29) among FFS Medicare patients admitted for bleeding complications to the hospital targeted by the B-SAFE campaign. The same association was not observed in the control hospital (OR = 1.15; CI = 0.42-3.14). These findings suggest that patient exposure to the B-SAFE campaign may have resulted in a decrease in the rate of clinically significant warfarin-related drug interactions.
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