Home Medication Review (HMR).
If you are responsible for someone’s medical care, it’s important to manage their medicines very carefully. Not taking them properly or mixing the wrong ones can have very serious consequences. You can ask for a free home medicines review by a pharmacist to highlight any potential problems and get advice that will help you manage.
What is a home medicines review (HMR)?
A home medicines review (HMR) is when an accredited pharmacist checks the medicines you are taking at home.
An HMR is different from a medication review by a GP or hospital. Doctors make sure the person is receiving the right medicines for their condition. An HMR also makes sure the person is taking those medicines correctly.
First the person you care for will need a referral from their GP to a local pharmacist ,a private pharmacist of your choice or one the doctor recommends. They will not need to pay for the home medicines review, but the person you care for may need to pay to see the GP unless they bulk bill.
The pharmacist will talk to you and the person you care for, usually at your home if it’s easiest for you, about the medicines you are giving the person you care for. They will look at everything the person is taking, including prescription medicines, over the counter medicines and vitamins and supplements. They will check everything is being taken correctly and hasn’t passed its use-by date; show you how to store medicines properly; suggest ways of helping you remember to give the person the right medicines at the right time; and suggest whether any medicines could be changed.
The pharmacist can also show you how to use and look after any medical devices the person may need, such as inhalers, blood pressure monitors and blood glucose monitors.
The pharmacist will write a report and send it to your GP. After going through it with you, the GP will then give you a ‘Medication Management Plan’. This should be shared with every healthcare provider who sees the person you care for.
If the person’s circumstances change - for example, if they need to start taking new medicines - you may need another HMR. You can have a home medicines review every 12 months. If you think medicines are affecting the person in their daily life, talk to your GP.