John C Standish, Laura Chapman, Ohsha Cloyd, Karan Johnson, Katie Mellody, Karlee Fisher, Cathy Gustavel, Michael Bigham
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Medication workflows are important to improve patient safety and provide timely lifesaving medical care. When operating efficiently, they can also decrease medication and labor waste. The objective of this quality improvement project is to compare missing dose request rates before and after improvements in medication workflows, specifically, decreases in medication and labor waste and the financial implications of these improvements.
Methods: The study evaluated the rate of medication missing dose requests on a 24-bed medical surgical unit in a standalone pediatric hospital from May 2022 to October 2022. Medication workflows were evaluated by pharmacy and nursing team members, and interventions were identified and implemented with the Model for Improvement methodology. Outcomes of missing dose requests per 100 medication doses dispensed were tracked weekly, as were staff time and costs of medications.
Results: The missing dose requests per 100 medication doses dispensed decreased from 3.8 to 1.03 during the 6-month initiative. This improvement estimated that 988 missing medication doses were prevented, leading to an estimated $61,038.64 in waste savings. The average cost of the medication and materials (excluding labor) to replace a single missing dose of medication was $61.78. The median cost was $54.71 (IQR, 11.91-4,213.11). Pharmacist, pharmacy technician, and nurse time saved per missing dose were estimated to be 6, 14, and 17 minutes, respectively.
Conclusion: Multimodal improvements in inpatient medication workflow reduce missed medication errors and improve cost and labor efficiencies.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Pediatric Pharmacology and Therapeutics is the official journal of the Pediatric Pharmacy Advocacy Group. JPPT is a peer-reviewed multi disciplinary journal that is devoted to promoting the safe and effective use of medications in infants and children. To this end, the journal publishes practical information for all practitioners who provide care to pediatric patients. Each issue includes review articles, original clinical investigations, case reports, editorials, and other information relevant to pediatric medication therapy. The Journal focuses all work on issues related to the practice of pediatric pharmacology and therapeutics. The scope of content includes pharmacotherapy, extemporaneous compounding, dosing, methods of medication administration, medication error prevention, and legislative issues. The Journal will contain original research, review articles, short subjects, case reports, clinical investigations, editorials, and news from such organizations as the Pediatric Pharmacy Advocacy Group, the FDA, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists, and so on.