Medication Reconciliation A Saskatoon Health Region Initiative

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…a shared responsibility for health care Medication Reconciliation A Saskatoon Health Region Initiative

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Medication Reconciliation A Saskatoon Health Region Initiative. Medication Reconciliation – what is it?. A formal process of: Obtaining a complete and accurate list of each patient’s current home medications (name, dosage, frequency, route) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Medication Reconciliation A Saskatoon Health Region Initiative

Page 1: Medication Reconciliation A Saskatoon Health Region Initiative

…a shared responsibility for health care

Medication Reconciliation

A Saskatoon Health Region Initiative

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Medication Reconciliation – what is it?

• A formal process of:– Obtaining a complete and accurate list of each

patient’s current home medications (name, dosage, frequency, route)

– Comparing the physician’s admission, transfer, and/or discharge orders to that list

– Bringing discrepancies to the attention of the prescriber and ensuring changes are made to the orders, when appropriate

Reference: IHI, Getting Started Kit: Prevent Adverse Drug Events (Medication

Reconciliation)

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Medication Reconciliation can:

• Prevent omission of an at-home medication

• Match in-house dose, frequency and route with at-home dose

• Assure medications follow the patient from one care site to another

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Why?

• Recent media attention and legal cases

• Concern over patient safety is growing, both among the Canadian public and among health care providers

• 2.9-16.6% of patients in acute care hospitals experienced one or more adverse events

• Greater than 50% of all hospital medication errors occur at the interfaces of care – Admission to hospital, Transfer from one nursing unit to

another, Transfer to step-down care, Discharge from hospital

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Why Now?• It’s the right thing to do……..

– Culture of safety: reduce medication errors & potential for patient harm

– Key component of seamless care strategies– Saves time for physicians, nurses, and pharmacists in

the long-term

• Medication Reconciliation is a new Canadian Council on Health Services Accreditation Standard

• Senior Leadership has endorsed Medication Reconciliation as a Regional Project of high priority

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Potential Impact

• Implementation of medication reconciliation along with other interventions decreased the rate of medication errors by 70% and adverse drug events by 15%, over a seven month period.[i]

• Implementation in a surgical population reduced potential adverse drug events by 80% within three months of implementation.[ii]

[i] Whittington J, Cohen H. OSF healthcare’s journey in patient safety. Qual Manag Health Care 2004;13(1):53-59

[ii] Michels RD, Meisel S. Program using pharmacy technicians to obtain medication histories. Am J Health Syst Pharm 2003;60:1982-1986

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Potential Impact• There was a five fold reduction (1.75% to 0.35%)

in the number of medication errors upon admission with implementation of medication reconciliation upon admission.[i]

• For those with no missing medications, drug related problems after discharge were reduced from 85% with original prescription process, to 35%.[ii]

[i] Rodehaver C, Fearing D. Medication reconciliation in acute care: ensuring an accurate drug regimen on admission and discharge. J Qual Patient Saf 2005;31(7):406-413

[ii] Poole DL, Chainakul MP, Graham L. Medication reconciliation: A hospital necessity in promoting a safe hospital discharge. J Healthc Qual (NAHQ) 2006 May/June

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Potential Impact: The Time Crunch!!

• Nursing Time at admission was reduced by 20 minutes per client, and pharmacist time at discharge was reduced by over 40 minutes per client.[i]

[i] Rozich JD, Resar RK, et al. Standardization as a mechanism to improve safety in healthcare: impact of sliding scale insulin protocol and reconciliation of medications initiatives. Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf 2004;30(1):5-14

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Origins of Medication Reconciliation • The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)

introduced the 100K Lives campaign in December 2004 to challenge health care providers to join a national effort to make health care safer & more effective & ensure hospitals achieve the best possible outcomes for all patients

• On April 12, 2005, the Canadian campaign, Safer Healthcare Now! was created. SHR is a registered member.

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SHR Medication Reconciliation Initiative

Ultimate goal:– Prevent adverse drug events by implementing

medication reconciliation

How?• Use the Model for Improvement

– Use Plan, Do, Study, Act (PDSA) cycles to test form and process

– Make small changes, test, obtain feedback, revise and re-test.

• Start with the Admission process

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Pilot Sites & Champions

• RUH Pediatrics• RUH Surgery 5000• SPH 6th Medicine• SCH Gynecology 4300 (PAC)• St. Elizabeth’s Hospital (Humboldt)

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Stories

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SHR Baseline Data

• Undocumented Intentional Discrepancies:– 1.32 / patient

• Unintentional Discrepancies:– 1.28 / patient

• Medication Reconciliation Success Index:– 67.9%

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SHR Form and Process

• A formal process of:– Obtaining a complete and accurate list of

each patient’s current home medications (name, dosage, frequency, route)

– Using the information obtained to write the admission orders

– Referring back to the information obtained to write transfer and discharge orders

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Medication ReconciliationForm and Process

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1. Addressograph2.

AllergiesISMP standard. Required information for pharmacist to process order.

3. Height & Weight ISMP standard

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4. List all medicationspatient was taking PTA, including name, dose, frequency, route.[MD, RN/LPN/RPN, BSP]

Do not re-write meds on admitting databases [use stamp].

5. Time / date of last dose.

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7. MD to indicate if med is to continue, stop, or change. Comments can also be added.

6. Name of person who obtained history.

8. MD signs / dates order. Once this occurs no further changes can be made to order section. RN crosses out blank lines.

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10. A form is completed for all patients even if on no medications prior to admission.

9. RN/LPN/RPNinitials when orders are processed, faxed, and MAR’d.

11. Document any comments, concerns, or follow-up required.

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Other:• If PAC patient: double check info on day of surgery.

• Source of information.

• Disposition of patient’s medications.

Check if information continues on second page.

Page number

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Page 2 available,when necessary

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Take new form & check ‘addendum’ if additional information becomes available after the original form has been signed by the physician.Document the changes only.

Patient / caregiver, etc.provide new information

at later date.

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Stamp

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Complete & Accurate Medication List

• Essential component of safe and effective patient care.

• Essential component of medication reconciliation.

• List should include information on all medications the patient was taking prior to admission, including prescription, non-prescription, herbal products, and supplements.

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Questions to Obtain Admission Medication List

• Do you have any allergies to medication? Describe the reaction.

• What medication were you taking prior to admission?

• Did a doctor change the dose or stop any of your medication recently?

• Have you changed the dose or stopped any of your medication recently?

• Have you recently started any medications?

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Questions to Obtain Admission Medication List

• Have any of your medications been causing side effects?

• When you feel better, do you sometimes stop taking your medication?

• Sometimes if you feel worse when you take your medication, do you stop taking it?

• Are the pills in the bottle the same as what is on the label?

• Have you changed your daily routine to accommodate your medication schedule?

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Vision for the Future

• Admission Form linked to Drug Plan Information

• IT solutions - Transfer and Discharge piece

• Working on various strategies to make the process safer and simpler

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DRAFT

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The Train Has Left The Station...Are YOU On It?

• Medication reconciliation fits perfectly with SHR’s culture of safety and optimal patient care

• Medication reconciliation has already shown reduced medication discrepancies on pilot sites within SHR

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Results: Run Charts of Key Measures

1.0 Mean Number of Undocumented Intentional Discrepancies

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Results: Run Charts of Key Measures

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Improving! Provide enhancements to facilitate medication history.

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Results: Run Charts of Key Measures

3.0 Medication Reconciliation Success Index

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The Train Has Left The Station...Are YOU On It?

• Medication reconciliation will save time for nurses, physicians, and pharmacists

• HCPs already take a medication history: now we are doing it on one form and it will be easier to find

• Future computerization will simplify the process even more (e.g. drug plan histories will appear on the admission form)

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• HCPs will know that a medication change is intentional (rather than wonder if there was a transcription error or a missed order), and be able to advise the patient and family members accordingly

• It will be easy to find the at-home medication list in order to reconcile on discharge as all preadmission medications will be on the new admission form

The Train Has Left The Station...Are YOU On It?

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• Transcription errors will be eliminated on transfer and discharge using current computer capabilities

• A clear discharge medication list will be available for patients, pharmacists and physicians

• Outcomes from the changes are being monitored (PDSA cycles), and improvements are already evident

The Train Has Left The Station...Are YOU On It?

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Questions?