Statement 5.1
“The “seven rights” (the right patient, right medicine, right dose, right route, right time, right information and right documentation) should be fulfilled in all medicines-related activities in the hospital.”
“This is not an exhaustive list of ‘rights’ and with the increase in use of personalised medicines the ‘right patient’ has an additional meaning beyond just identification of the individual, it is also now whether the medicine is genetically appropriate for that individual patient.”
Statement 5.2
“Hospital pharmacists should ensure the development of appropriate quality assurance strategies for medicines use processes to detect errors and identify priorities for improvement.”
Statement 5.3
“Hospital pharmacists should ensure their hospitals seek review of their medicines use processes by an external quality assessment accreditation programme, and act on reports to improve the quality and safety of these processes.”
Statement 5.4
“Hospital pharmacists should ensure the reporting of adverse drug reactions and medication errors to regional or national pharmacovigilance programmes or patient safety programmes.”
Statement 5.5
“Hospital pharmacists should help to decrease the risk of medication errors by disseminating evidence-based approaches to error reduction including computerised decision support.”
Statement 5.6
“Hospital pharmacists should identify high-risk medicines and ensure appropriate procedures are implemented in procurement, prescribing, preparing, dispensing, administration and monitoring processes to minimise risk.”
Statement 5.7
“Hospital pharmacists should ensure that the medicines administration process is designed such that transcription steps between the original prescription and the medicines administration record are eliminated.”
Statement 5.8
“Hospital pharmacists should ensure accurate recording of all allergy and other relevant medicine-related information in the patient’s health record. This information should be accessible and evaluated prior to prescription and administration of medicines.”
Ensuring there is comprehensive recording of allergies is a responsibility of all professionals within the multidisciplinary team. Hospital pharmacists should share this responsibility where there is no allergy record for a patient.
Statement 5.9
“Hospital pharmacists should ensure that the information needed for safe medicines use, including both preparation and administration, is accessible at the point of care.”
Statement 5.10
“Hospital pharmacists should ensure that medicines stored throughout the hospital are packaged and labelled so to assure identification, maintain integrity until immediately prior to use and permit correct administration.”
Statement 5.11
“Hospital pharmacists should support and implement systems that allow traceability of all medicines dispensed by the pharmacy.”