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.
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.”
What does it mean for patients? Errors with high risk medicines may be fatal for patients, it is therefore necessary that independent check procedures prior to administration are implemented. Hospital pharmacists should be involved in this process to ensure patient safety
What does it mean for healthcare professionals? The prescription of high risk medicines is prone to errors which could be fatal and should be validated by hospital pharmacists prior to dispensing, compounding or administration. High risk medicines should be checked for the “seven rights” prior to administration independently by two health care professionals according to the appropriate and approved in-process checking.
What does it mean for Hospital Pharmacists? implementation of the procedures.
Examples of best practice are e.g.
- abelling of intravenous tubing near insertion site to prevent misconnections
- use of enteral feeding catheters that cannot be connected with intravenous or other parenteral lines
- dispensing ready-to-administer dilutions of concentrated electrolyte products (such as potassium chloride and sodium chloride)
- oral syringes that are distinctly different from hypodermic syringes
- HOSPITAL PHARMACY UNIFIES ELECTRONIC STANDARD PRESCRIPTION THROUGHOUT THE REGION
- PROTOCOL IMPLEMENTATION FOR PRESCRIBING AND DISPENSING POSTEXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS KITS FOR HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS IN A THIRD-LEVEL HOSPITAL
- IMPLEMENTING THE PRODUCTION OF STERILISED SYRINGES IN THE HOSPITAL: IMPROVING MEDICATION SAFETY AND SAVING HEALTHCARE COSTS
- PROMOTING THE USE OF SAFER INJECTABLE MEDICINES USING A NOVEL METRIC
- EVALUATION OF THE IMPACT OF PATIENT EDUCATION WORKSHOP ON CARDIOVASCULAR PATIENTS USING THE SELF-EFFICACY CONCEPT
- A SET OF QUALITY IMPROVEMENT INTERVENTIONS TO INCREASE THE PERCENTAGE OF STAT IV MEDICINES, MEETING THE GOAL OF BEING READY WITHIN 30 MINUTES
- EAHP Statement on Patient Safety
- EAHP Survey Report 2015
- EAHP Statements Survey 2015-S5.6 "Our hospital has appropriate procedures in place to identify high-risk medicines and minimise the risks from their use in the following areas"?
- GPI: HIGH-ALERT MEDICATIONS, A STEP FORWARD TO IMPROVE PATIENT SAFET
- GPI:Improving the quality of ADR reporting
- GPI: CONTINUITY IN PERIOPERATIVE MEDICATION MANAGEMENT
- GPI: Training nursing staff on safe drug administration in the emergency department
- EAHP Brochure