TY - JOUR T1 - Assessing the quality of drug information provided by hospital pharmacies using a fictitious enquiry and simulated real-life conditions JF - European Journal of Hospital Pharmacy JO - Eur J Hosp Pharm SP - e79 LP - e84 DO - 10.1136/ejhpharm-2020-002409 VL - 28 IS - e1 AU - Dorothea Strobach AU - Ute Blassmann AU - Sigrun Gundl AU - Sabine Krebs AU - Christiane Querbach AU - Carolin Schuhmacher AU - Claudia Langebrake Y1 - 2021/11/01 UR - http://ejhp.bmj.com/content/28/e1/e79.abstract N2 - Objectives Guidelines for drug information (DI) provided by hospital pharmacists call for quality assurance procedures; however, no method of evaluation is internationally agreed on. The procedure should be feasible, reproducible and representative for real-life quality. We tested a new approach using a fictitious enquiry under simulated real-life conditions for quality assessment of DI by German hospital pharmacists.Methods A fictitious enquiry was submitted under simulated real-life conditions (study part I; test week announced, but not exact day; response time given). An expert panel determined content-related (three essential, and up to seven additional items of useful information) and structural requirements for answers and performed blinded evaluations. To compare quality of routine DI answers (study part II), five recently answered routine enquiries could retrospectively be evaluated for plausibility (binary scale 0/1) and structural requirements.Results Of 62 hospital pharmacies opting to participate, 45 (71%) entered study part I and 18 (40%) entered study part II. In study part I, 28 participants (62%) presented three essential contents, 11 (24%) two, five (11%) one, and one none. Additional useful information was given in 44–80%. Structural requirements achieved mixed results with low scores for logical conclusion deduction and reference presentation. In study part II, plausibility for the 90 recently answered routine enquiries was rated good (median 0.91, range 0.53–1). Concerning structural requirements, overall comparable results were achieved with minor variations compared with study part I. Thus, the quality of DI was judged to be comparable between study parts I and II.Conclusions An open quality assessment procedure with a fictitious enquiry under simulated real-life conditions can successfully be used for quality measurement of DI of hospital pharmacists and identifies areas for improvement.Data are available upon reasonable request. ER -