The EAHP Board, elected for three-year terms, oversees the association’s activities. Comprising directors responsible for core functions, it meets regularly to implement strategic goals. Supported by EAHP staff, the Board controls finances, coordinates congress organization, and ensures compliance with statutes and codes of conduct.
Preparing for disaster – ensuring and optimizing the supply of medicines to a regional acute Hospital in the event of a major accident
European Statement
Patient Safety and Quality Assurance
Author(s)
Fabrizia Negrini, Giorgia Vella
Why was it done?
The aims of this project were firstly to optimize the content of the stock (choice of medicines and quantity) so that it is suitable for various potential events of different nature that may occur in the region. The second aim was to optimize the management processes in order to reduce costs.
What was done?
To manage extraordinary events (short-lasting phenomenon without contamination) in a region with 1.5 million inhabitants, the hospital pharmacy, in collaboration with a major acute Hospital, manages a designated stock containing medication that may be required during unplanned emergencies.
How was it done?
To achieve these two aims, the first step was to define which major events are possible and most likely to occur in the region. To do this we utilized a risk-based analysis of all disasters and emergencies relevant in the area that was performed by an external company that specializes in developing risk management projects in the context of civil protection1. Based on the identified events, we determined which types of injuries were more likely to occur. The medicine stock was subsequently updated and a process for minimizing the management cost was defined.
What has been achieved?
The hazards that were identified as being of particular importance for the analyzed region are likely to mainly result in blunt, perforating, and burn injuries. In collaboration with the Hospital, a list of 61 different medicines used to treat these types of injuries was established. In order to reduce costs, only drugs which were part of the main stock of the pharmacy were chosen. In this way, it is possible to exchange products with a longer shelf life from the main stock 6 months before expiring and use them without having to discard them.
What next?
In case of extraordinary events in a restricted region, the major acute hospital has an increased need for certain medicines. It is task of the hospital pharmacy to always be ready to supply them with such medicines. This is only possible if the probable emergency scenarios are well understood, and the stock and management processes are well-defined and communicated at all levels.