PROCEDURE TO ENSURE CORRECT MEDICATION MANAGEMENT IN THE PERIOPERATIVE PROCESS (submitted in 2019)
Pdf
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
Noelia Vicente Oliveros, María Muñoz García, Álvaro Ruigomez Saiz, Montserrat Ferre Masferrer, Teresa Bermejo Vicedo, Eva Delgado Silveira, Lucía Quesada Muñoz, Ana María Alvarez-Diaz
Why was it done?
An analysis of the indicators of the perioperative process reflected the need to improve their quality. One of the causes of scheduled surgery cancellation was the lack of the follow up of the anaesthetist’s medication recommendations. Medications need to be carefully managed to prevent perioperative complications.
What was done?
We designed and implemented a flow chart to ensure the patient compliance of anesthetist’s medication recommendations prior to surgery. We designed a protocol for the perioperative medication management.
How was it done?
A multidisciplinary group was formed with the management of the hospital and representatives of all the services involved in the perioperative process. The group designed the flow chart of the process by consensus. Patients were candidates to enter in this process if they were on treatment with anticoagulant or 2 or more medications from the following groups: antiplatelet, antihypertensives, antidiabetics. A pharmacist called by phone three times (the day before, the day of medication change, and the day after) to the patient to ensure the compliance of anaesthetist recommendations. If there was a lack of compliance, the pharmacist contacted the surgeon who was in charge of deciding if the surgery procedure continued as scheduled. Moreover, the domiciliary medication of these patients were reconcilliated and recorded in their health record. Healthcare professionals could consult it during hospital stay. The group designed a protocol for the perioperative medication management with different medical specialists.
What has been achieved?
The project started in April 2019. The pharmacist called patients with scheduled surgery of lower limbs. A total of 31 patients benefited from the new flow chart. The pharmacist detected 38 medication errors; two involved errors concerning the suspension of anticoagulant drugs prior to surgery and four implied antihypertensive drugs. Once, it was necessary to contact the surgeon. In this case, the surgeon decided to continue with the surgery as schedule. Fifty-seven medications suffered a change in the period between the anaesthestic visit and the surgery, nine of them belonged to the monitored medication group.
What next?
The next steps are to spread the flow chart to other patients, to distribute the protocol among hospital healthcare professionals and to implement a procedure for the reintroduction of the modified medication.
SAFETY IMPROVEMENT IN PAEDIATRICS: ASSISTED PRESCRIPTION OF INTRAVENOUS MIXTURES (submitted in 2019)
Pdf
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
Iván Maray Mateos, Miguel Alaguero Calero, Adrián Rodriguez Ferreras, Cristina Calzón Blanco, Cristina Álvarez Asteinza, Lucía Velasco Roces, Ana Lozano Blazquez
Why was it done?
Intravenous drugs in the paediatric population bring up additional issues than the usual in adults. In their prescription, not only does the dose have to be adapted to the patient’s weight, the volume in which the drug is diluted must also be adapted to the reduced fluids requirement without jeopardising the stability of the mixture. In view of these facts, IV drug prescription in paediatrics implies a higher risk of medication errors. This new prescribing system simplifies prescription and reduces risks.
What was done?
Development of an assisted prescription system of intravenous mixtures adapted to paediatric patients in which both the drug dose and the diluent volume are automatically calculated according to the patient’s weight.
How was it done?
A literature review of drug dosing in paediatrics and their stability in different diluents was performed. For every drug the following parameters were considered: maximum dose in children (mg/kg), maximum concentration allowed (mg/ml), common doses and volumes in adults. Using these values, a system was built which calculated drug dose and diluent volume according to the patient’s weight and the maximum concentration allowed for stability reasons. For safety and to ease the preparation, the diluent volume in millilitres was rounded up to the next 10. In order to avoid overdosing overweight or older paediatric patients, maximum dose and diluent volume were narrowed down to the usual quantities in adults. Ultimately, this system was integrated in the electronic prescription system. A protocol was created, named “drug name” IV mixture PEDIATRICS. So, by selecting this protocol in a specific patient, the target dose and the diluent volume are automatically calculated.
What has been achieved?
This system was implemented for 38 drugs. From July 2018 to April 2019, 910 IV mixtures have been prescribed from the following Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical (ATC) groups: A02 Drugs for acid related disorders (39), J01 Antibacterials for systemic use (287), J02 Antimycotics for systemic use (3), J05 Antivirals for systemic use (8), A04 Antiemetics and antinauseants (175), N02 Analgesics (395), N03 Antiepileptics (3).
What next?
This method could be implemented in other electronic prescription programmes. The system must be updated by the Pharmacy Department, introducing new drugs and constantly reviewing stability databases, posology regimens, and information regarding dilution of parenteral drugs.
THE OPIOID WORKING GROUP: AN INTERDISCIPLINARY WORKING GROUP TO IMPROVE THE CORRECT PRESCRIPTION AND APPLICATION OF OPIOIDS IN THE HOSPITAL SETTING (submitted in 2019)
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
Imke Willrodt, Delia Bornand, Jimena Ramos, Stojan Petkovic, Giulia Mohr, Anne Leuppi-Taegtmeyer
Why was it done?
Due to critical incidents involving opioids reported internally at the University Hospital Basel in 2018, there was an urgent need to evaluate underlying reasons for these events. The Opioid AG was established with the aim to mitigate risks for the correct prescription and application of opioids, and therefore to improve patient safety.
What was done?
The Opioid Working Group at the University Hospital Basel is an interdisciplinary working group including representatives from different professions (physicians, nurses, pharmacists) and departments (medical, surgery, gynaecology, emergency, pain therapy, palliative care, pharmacology and toxicology, patient safety and information technology).
How was it done?
The thorough analysis of root causes for the critical incidents revealed prescribing and application errors, such as non-observance of kidney failure, pharmacodynamic interactions of opioids with other prescribed drugs, inadvertent overdosing – in particular with liquid drug formulations, or patient mix-ups.
What has been achieved?
Consequently, the following steps are being taken to address these risks: 1. Optimisation of the prescribing software including opioid prescription templates, links to existing opioid unit conversion tables for liquid forms of diamorphine, morphine, hydrocodone and oxycodone (milligrams to millilitres) as well as clearer display of “as required” opioid prescriptions on the patients’ electronic drug charts. 2. Preparation of Standard Medication Preparation Schemes for nursing staff of the emergency department. 3. Development of an additional label (concentration, patient initials, date of reconstitution, date of expiry of reconstituted solution) for parenteral diamorphine. 4. Improvement in detailed written instructions for the correct preparation, labelling, application and disposal of intravenous and oral drugs (to include opioids). 5. Evaluation of a hospital opioid safety self-assessment tracking tool.
What next?
A comprehensive evaluation will take place, 6 months after the implementation of all measures. We will use the number of naloxone prescriptions on the wards as a key performance indicator to measure the success of this project. The reported critical incidents involving opioids will also be assessed before and after the implementation of all measures.
This evaluation will help to identify open questions, potential gaps and further needs for improvement to be addressed by the interdisciplinary team.
IMPLANTATION OF A COMMUNICATION CIRCUIT OF ALERTS AND SAFETY NOTES RELATED TO DRUGS FROM THE PHARMACY DEPARTMENT (submitted in 2019)
Pdf
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
Ignacio García Giménez, Natalia Martín Fernández, Olalla Montero Pérez, Ernesto Sánchez Gómez, Isabel María Carrión Madroñal
Why was it done?
The aim is to implement a protocol to follow when these safety notes/alerts are released from the AEMPS. It comprehends the reception of the information, its registration and its communication, when needed, to the rest of the healthcare professionals.
What was done?
A communication circuit of alerts and safety notes related to drugs coming from the “Agencia Española de Medicamentos y Productos Sanitarios (AEMPS)”.
How was it done?
At the reception of an alert from the AEMPS, the first step is to check if the drug has been acquired by the Pharmacy, and then act in accordance with the recommendations, informing the Departments in which the medication had been dispensed. If a drug must be retired and a stock break is generated, the healthcare professionals must be informed as well. Security notes from the AEMPS are published in the local hospital website, where the documents sent by the AEMPS can be found. If this medication is included in the Pharmacotherapeutic guide, a notification is shown when it is prescribed. Finally, all alerts and security notes, with the pharmacist intervention, are registered in a database.
What has been achieved?
Since the implementation of the circuit, 14 alerts and 9 security notes were sent from the AEMPS in a period of 6 months. No interventions regarding the alerts were needed. Healthcare professionals were informed when the security notes were released, pointing to the patients at risk, the precautions required and the alternative therapies available.
What next?
To incorporate it as an indicator of quality of care within the procedures performed by the pharmacy department and detect areas of improvement.
PATIENT-CENTRED CARE IN ATRIAL FIBRILLATION: AN INTEGRATED MANAGEMENT APPROACH (submitted in 2019)
Pdf
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
virginia Silvari, Suzanne McCarthy , Gerry Allen
Why was it done?
Before its establishment, patients were referred by primary and secondary care physicians to a general cardiology clinic, often resulting in delay of the initial assessment and/or commencement of treatment for AF by the ANP. The HP had no involvement in this care pathway. The AF clinic has shortened the referral pathway for patients; physicians now refer patients directly to the clinic. The HP is responsible for medication optimisation; counselling and education whilst clinicians can focus on clinical examinations, diagnostics and analysis of tests results.
What was done?
The atrial fibrillation (AF) clinic was established in a tertiary referral hospital. The clinic is led by a hospital pharmacist (HP), with expertise in cardiology and anticoagulation, and an advanced nurse practitioner (ANP) specialised in electrophysiology. Cardiologists’ input is available when required. In line with AF guidelines of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC), patients attending the clinic receive full stroke risk assessment and are presented with different treatment options by the Multidisciplinary Team (MDT). These options include heart rate/ rhythm control and stroke prevention and where appropriate DC-cardioversion. Patient’s preferences guide management of the treatment.
How was it done?
Stakeholder engagement was essential in establishing the clinic and planning meetings were used to ensure seamless delivery of the service. Analysis of the process showed that the critical path (bottleneck) was access to diagnostics on the same day of attendance of the patient to the clinic. Therefore, the clinic was established on a day where the cardiac-physiology department had sufficient resources to accommodate the clinic. It was also necessary to ensure allocated time for the ANP and HP to deliver the service.
What has been achieved?
The HP has improved patient safety by conducting medication reviews, in particular optimisation of anticoagulants according to patients’ preferences (warfarin versus direct oral anticoagulants) and their characteristics such as renal functions, body weight and age. HP also provides to the patients a one-to-one counselling session on their medications (focus on anticoagulants), adherence, drug interactions and side effects.
What next?
Having seen the benefits of this AF Clinic and the holistic service it delivers, it is recommended that hospitals establish an AF clinic to provide optimum treatment and prevent AF-related complications.
A QUALITY IMPROVEMENT PROJECT ON HEPARIN INFUSION SAFETY IN AN ACUTE TEACHING HOSPITAL (submitted in 2019)
Pdf
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
Anthony Hackett, Alice Oborne, Emma Ritchie, Caroline Broadbent, Rebecca Chanda, Karen Breen
Why was it done?
Anticoagulants such as UFH are recognised as high risk drugs. UFH requires frequent monitoring of the activated partial thromboplastic time ratio (APTTr), ensuring therapeutic anticoagulation and minimising adverse effects. UFH infusions and the APTTr were recorded using a paper based system. Incident reporting identified by the paper system resulted in inappropriate monitoring and management of UFH infusions, and dose omissions which could have resulted in harm.
What was done?
A Trust-wide electronic prescribing and medicines administration (EPMA) system was implemented in 2015. Complex infusions, e.g. unfractionated heparin (UFH) infusions, remained on paper due to EPMA functionality limitations. The complex infusion function was added into later EPMA upgrades. A multidisciplinary team (MDT) involving nursing, medical and pharmacy staff working within anticoagulation, EPMA and medication safety sought to design UFH infusions in EPMA.
How was it done?
Baseline audit (Paper-March 2016): Patients prescribed UFH infusions (n=14) were identified using SharePoint (e-reporting) by searching for the UFH infusion placeholder. Performance was measured against eight audit standards.
Re-audit (EPMA-March 2019): Patients prescribed UFH infusions (n=26) were identified using SharePoint by searching for those prescribed a UFH infusion on EPMA. Performance was measured against the same eight audit standards.
Chi square applied to results to test for statistical significance.
Incident rate per prescription: The Datix system was searched to identify heparin incidents reported during the data collection periods.
What has been achieved?
Audit standard 2016 audit v 2019 audit
1-Baseline APTTr checked before starting infusion 93% v 100%, p=0.1
2-Received correct loading dose of heparin based on APTTr 79% v 96%, p=0.07
3-APTTr checked 6 hours after infusion started 72% v 100%, p<0.05
4-APTTr checked 6 hours after infusion titrations 86% v 96%, p=0.2
5-APTTr in target range within 24 hours 50% v 70%, p=0.2
6-APTTr checked 24 hourly after 2 consecutive APTTr’s in range 100% v 100%=no change
7-Patient receives a medical review 24 hrly 65% v 100%, p<0.05
8-Heparin syringe and giving set changed 24 hrly 65% v 100%, p<0.05
UFH related incidents reduced from one incident per 1.6 infusions, to one incident per 6.5 infusions following the implementation of an EPMA system.
UFH incidents as a proportion of all anticoagulant incidents reduced from 43% (March-2016) to 20% (March-2019).
What next?
Electronic solution’s for high-risk, complex infusions such as heparin prescribing and monitoring improved care, quality and safety. Further high-risk infusions such as insulin are being developed
SAFE PRESCRIBING METRICS FOR HOSPITAL PHARMACY (submitted in 2019)
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
Oran Quinn, Anna Marzec
Why was it done?
Errors of miscalculation, doses inappropriate for renal function and at extremes of weight were reported when doses of medication were written as ‘mg/kg’ without stating the dose to be given e.g. Gentamicin 5mg/kg, Vancomycin 15mg/kg and Enoxaparin 1.5mg/kg.
What was done?
A quality improvement initiative to resolve issues with prescribing medications dosed by weight. Nursing staff were identified as ‘gate-keepers’ who could refuse to administer medication inappropriately prescribed. Identification, agreement, education and feedback were necessary to change prescribing practice and support nursing staff. Hospital doctors were required to calculate and prescribe the total dose to be given. Feedback was given by monthly bulletin.
How was it done?
Support from key stakeholders was sought to endorse the initiative. Verbal and written education was given to nursing, medical and pharmacy staff to implement the initiative on an agreed date. Refusal to administer medication unsafely prescribed was key to successful implementation. Patient’s weight was not always available and additional equipment was provided to overcome this problem. The risk of withholding treatment was considered and an escalating referral process was recommended contacting the Senior House Officer, then Registrar and ultimately the patients Consultant to avoid lengthy delays to patient treatment. Nurses felt supported in refusing to administer medication.
What has been achieved?
A point prevalence study of all inpatients was carried out monthly to ascertain the level of compliance Mar-19 Apr-19 May-19 Jun-19 Jul-19 Aug-19 % of patients with total dose prescribed correctly 67.0 86.7 96.7 100.0 100.0 88.9 87.5. Results showed overall improvement from March to August and full compliance in May and June. Success was achieved through a multidisciplinary approach involving all key stakeholders, a forcing function and support from and for front line staff.
What next?
This initiative has been further developed to become ‘Monthly Safe Prescribing Metrics’.
Other prescribing metrics such as using ‘iu’ dosing for Insulin, prescribing appropriately for patients at extremes of weight and using the abbreviation ‘mcg’ for medications dosed in ‘micrograms’ were included. Initiatives to improve all metrics are ongoing.
Safe prescribing metrics could help to positively influence prescribing culture in other healthcare settings.
PHARMACEUTICAL ALGORITHMS TO PERFORM MEDICATION PHARMACEUTICAL ANALYSIS (submitted in 2019)
Pdf
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
Arnaud Potier, Béatrice Demoré, Alexandre Dony, Emmanuelle Divoux, Emmanuelle Boschetti, Laure-Anne Arnoux, Cédric Dupont, Jean-Christophe Calvo, David Piney, Virginie Chopard, Nathalie Cretin, Edith Dufay
Why was it done?
Drug iatrogenia costs global health systems $52 billion annually. The third global patient safety challenge aims at reducing the global burden of iatrogenic medication-related harm by 50% within 5 years [1]. Pharmaceutical analysis is a fundamental activity, a regulatory obligation in many countries but remains a challenge. This practice is highly variable. A graphic definition of the target pharmaceutical analysis has been formalised in December 2017 which sets the basis for its digitalisation, effectively implemented since January 2019. The aim is to build a corpus of the most relevant PA to facilitate clinical pharmacist practice.
What was done?
A computerised clinical pharmacy tool is integrated into the health information system of our group of hospitals (5000 beds) to promote efficiency of pharmaceutical analysis in order to improve patient safety. Pharmaceutical algorithms (PA) are conceptualised to improve drug related problems (DRP) detection and their resolution through pharmaceutical intervention (PI) according to a defined conduct to be held: anamnesis of subjective and objective elements of appreciation, DRP characterisation and PI transmission. Pharmaceutical analysis is performed by the use of PharmaClass® (Keenturtle). This software has been interfaced with 5 health data flow of two health facilities (1000 of the 2000 beds were tested): identity and patient flow, medication data, laboratory results examination, medical history, physiological constants. PA are partially encoded as rules in Pharmaclass® that issues alerts analysed by a pharmacist.
How was it done?
Health data are lacking of semantic interoperability which Pharmaclass® aims at overcoming from Electronical health record (EHR) queries in real time. A corpus of PA has been structured integrating the conduct to be held. PA were created by modeling the pharmaceutical experiment with the thread of criticality. PA were validated by consensus.
What has been achieved?
80 PA were encoded into Pharmaclass®: 40 are targeting serious adverse drug events. 1516 alerts were analysed and 539 PI transmitted during the 9-month test period.
What next?
This practice is applicable to any pharmaceutical analysis that uses data from an EHR. Clinical pharmacy societies should host and take care of updating corpus of PA. Its educational interest should be exploited. A European interest group for artificial intelligence in clinical pharmacy is being created.
THE IMPACT OF A WARD SATELLITE PHARMACY ON CLINICAL PHARMACY SERVICES AND POTENTIAL COST BENEFIET (submitted in 2019)
Pdf
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
Thewodros Leka, iun Grayston, Mashal Kamran, Biljana Markovic
Why was it done?
The Carter report recommended that about 80% of hospital pharmacist time should be spent on the wards to provide clinical pharmacy services. However, in our hospital’s surgical specialty at the time of this report, it was found that only 33% of pharmacist’s time was spent on clinical pharmacy services. This had a negative impact on:
• rate of medication errors and near misses
• supply of critical medicines
• pharmacist participation in productive ward rounds
• timely discharge of patients home
What was done?
The Pharmacy department made a successful business case to the Hospital executives to open a Satellite pharmacy to serve 4 surgical wards. The proposal was to recruit a dedicated clinical pharmacist and Medicines Management Technician, and set-up a dispensing satellite pharmacy.
How was it done?
The business case indicated that if funded, the new satellite pharmacy team would: • improve clinical pharmacy key performance indicators • improve patient safety • deliver a potential cost benefit Funding limitation was an obstacle and we have to convince the board.
What has been achieved?
We achieved 60−90% improvement in the objectives set in the business case as illustrated in Table 1 and 2. The pharmacy team won the annual quality improvement award of 2018. Table 1: Clinical Pharmacy Service improvement Clinical pharmacy services Service rate pre-satellite pharmacy Service rate post satellite pharmacy % of service improvement Medication errors 16/month 6/month 63% Pharmacist interventions 20/month 80/month 75% Pharmacist participation in ward round 6/month 50/month 88% Time to dispense discharge summaries 90 minutes/discharge summary 20 minutes/discharge summary 77% Number of patients counselled 15/month 75/month 80% Pharmacist available in the ward 1.5 hrs/day 7.5 hrs/day 80% Time taken to supply critical medicines 1 hour 5 minutes 91% Table 2: Potential Cost-benefit savings achieved Activities Cost-benefit savings/year (€) Reducing length of stay of patients €17,000 Reducing repeat dispensing €16,000 Effective use of nursing time €11,000 Reducing prescribing errors €103,000 Total Savings €147,000.
What next?
• Weekend working.
• Service improvements can be transferred to acute medical units and downstream medical wards. Reference Carter report.
IMPLEMENTATION OF A MEDICATION SAFETY AGENDA AT TWO HOSPITAL SITES IN RESPONSE TO WORLD HEALTH ORGANISATION (WHO) PATIENT SAFETY CHALLENGE ‘MEDICATION WITHOUT HARM’ (submitted in 2019)
Pdf
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
Meenal Patel, Sheena Patel, Peta Longstaff
Why was it done?
• Initiative introduced and on-going since 2017
• To increase and embed medication safety awareness
• To address under-reporting of medication-related incidents, with feedback
• To embed medication safety in education programmes and clinical practice
What was done?
A local medication safety agenda implemented across two hospital sites in response to World Health Organisation (WHO) patient safety challenge ‘Medication without Harm’.
How was it done?
• Medication safety group (MSG) introduced with local strategy, involving junior medical staff for frontline feedback • Medication safety metrics changed to allow benchmarking with peers as per NHS Improvement’s Model Hospital data • ‘Plan, Do, Study, Act’ model applied to improve transfer of care from hospital to rehabilitation unit following external incidents • Monthly analysis of incidents with harm, exploring reasons for under-reporting • Optimisation of incident reporting system to improve staff feedback following investigations • Near miss error log introduced in pharmacy with shared learning • Mitigation of medication-related risks e.g. medications safe storage action plan • Medication safety bulletins, patient safety newsletters and top tips guide introduced covering focal themes • ‘Safe prescribing’ mandatory induction training for junior doctors to support prescribing of high risk medicines and compliance to patient safety alerts • Hospital-wide education on lessons learnt from incidents • Medication safety resources for staff to access • Nursing quality round on medication safety • Electronic missed doses realtime report developed to tackle omitted/delayed critical medication doses • Medication safety awareness (MSA) week held to increase awareness on focal themes
What has been achieved?
• Multidisciplinary MSG with assurance on meeting WHO global challenge. • Monthly analysis of medication safety data to allow learning, collaboration and benchmarking against peers. • Positive staff feedback on bulletins/newsletters with staff involvement/engagement. • Training programmes embedded with safe prescribing education. • Improved hospital safety metrics: Following MSA week, a 5% and 21% increase in medication-related incident reporting occurred at each site which has been sustained. Reporting rates doubled at one site following success of MSA week. • In 2018-19, local target achieved for reported medication-related incidents per 100,000 finished consultant episodes and medication-related incidents with harm
What next?
• Collaborative multidisciplinary working raising the profile of pharmacists acting as medication safety officers
• Implementing medication safety measures from NHS Patient Safety Strategy 2019
• Initiatives for safer culture, safer systems and safer patients