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Background: There is currently no validated tool available for assessing the potential significance of pharmacist interventions in Vietnam.
Aim: This study aimed to translate the CLEO tool from French into Vietnamese, validate the Vietnamese version, and demonstrate its feasibility in daily practice.
Method: The CLEO tool was translated into Vietnamese (CLEO) using a 5-step process by bilingual experts. A total of 100 scenarios were compiled from clinical cases from nine hospitals evaluated by seven clinical pharmacists to determine inter-rater reliability and 30 out of 100 scenarios were re-evaluated one month later to determine test-retest reliability. Reliability was quantified using the intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC). A 20-item questionnaire on a 7-point Likert scale assessed the tool's appropriateness, acceptability, precision, and feasibility.
Results: Inter-rater reliability was good for clinical dimension (ICC = 0.71), excellent for economic dimension (ICC = 0.86), and fair for organizational/operational dimension (ICC = 0.56). Test-retest reliability scores were excellent for clinical (I̅C̅C̅ = 0.79), excellent for economic (I̅C̅C̅ = 0.84), and fair for organizational/operational (I̅C̅C̅ = 0.56). The tool was rated as appropriate (mean = 5.86; SD = 1.03), acceptable (mean = 5.19; SD = 1.12), precise (mean = 5.71; SD = 1.17), and feasible (mean = 5.05; SD = 1.24). The maximum time required to evaluate an intervention was three minutes.
Conclusion: The CLEO tool was successfully translated and validated for reliability, appropriateness, acceptability, precision, and feasibility. It will be suitable to evaluate the value of clinical pharmacy interventions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11096-024-01813-y | DOI Listing |
Ann Pharm Fr
June 2025
Unité de pharmacie clinique et thérapeutique, UFR sciences pharmaceutiques et biologiques, université Felix Houphouët-Boigny, 99326 Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire.
Objective: Our aim was to analyze pharmaceutical interventions related to heart failure (HF) outpatient treatment.
Methods: An observationnal study was carried out over 6 months at the Abidjan Institute of Cardiology (ICA). Data were collected using a survey form that focused on therapeutic adherence, drugs related-problems (DRP) and pharmaceutical interventions (PI).
Int J Clin Pharm
April 2025
UMR 5525, University Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Grenoble INP, TIMC, VetAgro Sup, 38000, Grenoble, France.
Background: Since 2006, French hospital pharmacists have been able to document their interventions in the National Observatory Act-IP© and, since 2016, to assess the potential clinical, economic and organizational impacts of pharmacist interventions (PIs) via the CLEO© tool.
Aim: To describe pharmacist interventions in French hospitals from 2017 to 2021 and to evaluate their potential impacts using the CLEO© tool.
Method: The study was conducted to examine PIs documented in the Act-IP© Observatory.
Int J Clin Pharm
February 2025
Faculty of Pharmacy, Pham Ngoc Thach University of Medicine, Ho Chi Minh, 70000, Vietnam.
Background: There is currently no validated tool available for assessing the potential significance of pharmacist interventions in Vietnam.
Aim: This study aimed to translate the CLEO tool from French into Vietnamese, validate the Vietnamese version, and demonstrate its feasibility in daily practice.
Method: The CLEO tool was translated into Vietnamese (CLEO) using a 5-step process by bilingual experts.
Bioresour Technol
September 2024
Department of Molecular Sciences and Nanosystems, Ca' Foscari University, Via Torino, 155, Venezia Mestre, 30172 Venice, Italy.
Lignin represents a promising source of renewable energy. The development of CLEO (Cold processed Lignin Ethanol Oil) fuel introduces a novel lignin valorization approach, proposing its potential as maritime biofuel. However, its industrial success depends on enhancing fractionation yields and reducing solvent evaporation, which necessitates a detailed analysis of lignin properties, solvent types, and process parameters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
July 2024
School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Systems neuroscience has experienced an explosion of new tools for reading and writing neural activity, enabling exciting new experiments such as all-optical or closed-loop control that effect powerful causal interventions. At the same time, improved computational models are capable of reproducing behavior and neural activity with increasing fidelity. Unfortunately, these advances have drastically increased the complexity of integrating different lines of research, resulting in the missed opportunities and untapped potential of suboptimal experiments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF