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Medication Reconciliation: whose job is it anyway? Why a Multidisciplinary approach? Limitations identified in ‘pharmacists only’ approach • Baseline data from June 2010 showed pharmacists could reconcile medications for 35% of patients within 48 hours (gold standard is within 24 hours) • Insufficient pharmacists to complete and sustain medRec • If pharmacist’s sole focus could compromise other medication safety activities. • Gaps in medRec process would occur after hours and weekends • Address by targeted intervention of complex patients only? Initial Training: January 2011 • Pharmacy High 5 team developed a presentation – Presented to pharmacists and High 5 core group: • “Train the trainer” • Best Possible Medication history taking • Med Rec process • Compulsory attendance • Resources provided to train/teach ward staff. – Training Road shows – ward based training • Identified unit-specific processes – Grand/ ICU rounds Ongoing Training • JMO, Registrar and Resident training – Occasional ward based training – Secured additional training slots in orientation program • Medical Intern Pre-registration workshop • Pharmacist orientation • New grad nursing awareness training Patient Safety Culture in our hospital 2014: 2011: eMR commenced in ED 2011: Multidisciplinary approach of High 5 Initiative 2010 Patient safety culture survey: ED & Geriatrics (60%) (~25%) Patient safety culture changed for the better? 2014 Survey: Objectives: Primary: Do clinicians understand the importance of Medication Reconciliation: who, how and why? Secondary: – Were there any barriers to implementing this change – Can these barriers be overcome or resolved? Question Design Demographic Questions • What is your current staff position/specialty? Multiple choice & ‘Free text’ Questions • If there is no documented medication history or MMP in the patient notes, what would be your next course of action? Rating scale • What impact does the MMP have on your clinical decision making? •Extremely/Very/Moderately/Slightly/ No significant impact Removed bias • In your experience, have there been any barriers to completing or recording information on the MMP? Method • 2 Study sites: POWH, Redlands • Study group: Doctors, pharmacists and nurses • Collected data for 7 days via – Paper forms – Email ‘Survey monkey’ link • Supported by Directors of Clinical Services/Nursing/Pharmacy • Survey respondents remained Anonymous Results: Demographics Staff position Approx. Staff Population % Response per Discipline Population that responded (%) n = 138 Doctors (JMOs & SMOs) 400 49 (12%) Nursing 1200 65 (5%) Pharmacists 32 24 (75%) (n=138) Pharmacists 17% Doctors 36% Nursing 47% % Response per Specialty 12.4 12.4 12.4 7.4 6.6 6.6 5.8 4.1 0.8 1.7 0.8 1.7 1.7 0.8 1.7 1.7 0.8 2.5 7.4 5 0.8 Results: Education/Training Answer Yes No Did you receive any education/training? 62 (46.6) 71 (53.4) 58 (54.7) 48 (45.3) N = 133 (%) Was the education given at orientation sufficient? N= 106 (%) • Sample Comments/suggestions: – “I thought this was the role of the pharmacist? Any training would be useful” (Intern) – “Wasn’t able to attend” (Registrar) – “Online training, inservice, verbal discussion?” (RN) Who is responsible for completing the Medication Management Plan (MMP) form? 100 90 80 70 Percentage % Doctors 60 Pharmacists 50 Accredited Nursing Staff 40 30 Doctors, Pharmacists and Accredited Nursing Staff 20 Doctors and Pharmacists only 10 0 Doctors' Response n= 44 Nurses' Response n= 58 Pharmacists' Response n= 23 What do you understand to be the main reason/s for Medication Reconciliation? 120 Percentage % 100 80 60 Doctors n=40 40 Nurses n=59 20 0 Pharmacists n=24 Safety Culture Can you remember when MedRec helped to pick up a medication error? The MMP* helps my team to make safer medication decisions for our patients 100 Doctors n=44 Nurses n=54 90 Pharmacists n=22 100 91 93 80 Percentage % 70 60 Doctors n=42 50 Nurses n=57 40 Pharmacists n=22 30 20 9 10 7 0 0 No Yes No Yes *Medication Management Plan Form = a tool used at POWH to conduct Medication Reconciliation Overall Comments Clinician Comments Doctor MMPs are very useful for JMOs! A good tool when available in patient notes It’s a great initiative, please keep it going Electronic would be great MMP has no significant impact on admission because it is not usually done on admission Nurse I have found the MMP helpful if I have difficulty reading the doctor’s handwriting and also for checking that doses are correct when the charts change over to the next one Some education would be good so we can use it more effectively on ward rounds It’s not the nurse’s role to fill out the MMP form-should be medical or pharmacist Pharmacist MMPs are very useful but time consuming Only Pharmacists are doing MMPs Increases workload for pharmacists Discussion • Identified barriers: – Education reaching all stakeholders (frontline up) – Time – Documentation (electronic vs paper) • Identified improvements: – Patient safety culture awareness – Multidisciplinary approach identified • Limitations Factors identified required for future success • • • • Dedicated resources Strong multidisciplinary leadership Physician champion engagement Software that supports the High 5 SOP and • Ongoing comprehensive staff education plan • Change readiness of organisation A Doctor’s perspective Doctors’ attitudes • ‘We’re very busy’ • ‘Can’t the pharmacists do it?’ • ‘It means writing everything out multiple times’ • ‘What’s the point of it?’ • ‘Why don’t we just wait until electronic prescribing comes in?’ Issues • Capturing the correct audience to educate them that its everyones responsibility • We are missing the middle level (staff specialists, VMOs etc) • IT systems don’t speak to each other (or a mixture of paper and electronic notes) • It requires a change in attitude- but support for change • Senior staff don’t realise the importance of the process Problem: • Professional boundaries and established hierarchies may result in disagreements about where the responsibility for medicines reconciliation lies Solution: • Focus on reducing the risk for patients and increasing the availability of timely, accurate information • Any potential professional or hierarchical differences should be put aside to enable appropriately trained and competent healthcare professionals to take the lead Problem: • Competing demands and the common response that ‘the problem is too big ‘we don’t know where to start’’can be overwhelming for staff • This can lead to delays in getting medicines reconciliation off the ground Solution: • People need to be supported by managers to enable them to prioritise their workload • simple structures should be put in place so that medicines reconciliation becomes part of the organisation ’s everyday work There are no quick fixes, but this is a far from insurmountable problem A possible five-level hierarchy approach: • There are no shortcuts to breaking down silos. • You can’t fix the environment if the organization doesn’t understand the problem. • You can’t improve the development process if the right environment doesn’t exist to enable healthy guidelines. • Climb the pyramid brick by brick to the ultimate goal: better clinical outcomes through true collaboration. Practicalities • How do we ensure senior physicians care? • IIMS categorised into ‘med rec’ errors? • Statistics on IIMS, Med rec compliance to individual departments/teams? League tables?? • Grand rounds? • Presentations of RCAs concerning medication errors? • Using Accreditation- Standard 4 as a bargaining chip? Involving Patients • The value of involving patients and/or their carers in the medicines reconciliation process should not be underestimated • Patients are a valuable source of information about the medicines they take and, with support, they can be encouraged and enabled to take a fuller and more active part in the process Organisational approach • The profile of medicines reconciliation needs to be raised in all healthcare organisations • The Chief Executive, senior management lead and board members of an organisation can help by promoting the uptake of medicines reconciliation • Collaborative approach with other Australian hospitals involved • Get process right before instituting eMM- detrimental to put bad stuff into a good system Guess what? Its YOUR job! Acknowledgements • Survey question design & data collection: Ketty Rivas (Safety and Health Outcomes Officer) , Selina Boughton (Pharmacist) • Survey promotion: POWH Pharmacists