Discharge Information About Adverse Drug Reactions Indicates Lower Self-Reported Adverse Drug Reactions and Fewer Concerns in Patients After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
Pettersen T, Schjøtt J, Allore H, Bendz B, Borregaard B, Fridlund B, Hadjistavropoulos H, Larsen A, Nordrehaug J, Rasmussen T, Rotevatn S, Valaker I, Wentzel-Larsen T, Norekvål T, Investigators C. Discharge Information About Adverse Drug Reactions Indicates Lower Self-Reported Adverse Drug Reactions and Fewer Concerns in Patients After Percutaneous Coronary Intervention. Heart Lung And Circulation 2024, 33: 350-361. PMID: 38238118, DOI: 10.1016/j.hlc.2023.12.005.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchSelf-reported adverse drug reactionsPrescribed pharmacotherapyPotential adverse drug reactionsAdverse drug reactionsPercutaneous coronary interventionPatient-reported outcome measuresCovariate-adjusted logistic regressionConfidence intervalsNational quality registryProspective multicentre cohort studyAssociated with incidencePatients' medical recordsIntervention aimHealthcare providersQuality registryMulticentre cohort studyDischarge informationDrug reactionsInformation patientsOdds ratioOutcome measuresCohort studyHospital dischargeLogistic regressionPCI centre