减少心理健康中的药物不良事件:澳大利亚国家调查。

Q3 Medicine
Svetla Gadzhanova, Elizabeth Roughead, Helen Lowy, Daniel O'Connor
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引用次数: 3

摘要

目的:确定在澳大利亚公立和私立精神卫生住院单位实施循证药物安全实践的程度。方法:2015年在澳大利亚维多利亚州试点开展“减少心理健康不良用药事件”调查,并于2016年在全国推广。总共邀请了澳大利亚所有州和地区的235个精神卫生住院单位参加。调查的问题包括:精神卫生单位的人口统计数据、改善处方书写的循证战略、药物的管理和分配以及药房主导的干预措施,以及与消费者参与药物管理和共同决策有关的问题。结果:有效率为45% (N = 106个单位)。总体而言,调查发现57%的精神卫生单位完全或部分实施了基于证据的药物安全实践。据报道,使用标准化药物图表(如国家住院患者药物图表)作为改进药物处方写作的一种方式的执行率很高(80%)。大多数(71%)单位使用标准化表格记录用药史,56%的单位使用药物管理计划指定表格。然而,只有不到五分之一的单位实施了电子药物管理系统,大多数单位仍然依赖于纸质文件系统。改善药物管理和配药的干预措施没有得到高度利用。只有9%的单位完全实施了以患者为基础的个人药物分配系统,高度依赖病房库存或预付系统(81%)。只有三分之一的单位采用了“高个子”字样的标签。药房服务在精神卫生单位有很好的代表性,80%的人可以获得现场药剂师服务,提供现有药物评估和临床审查服务、药物不良反应报告和管理服务、患者和护理人员教育和咨询,以及药物信息服务。然而,药剂师只参与了一半的医疗和解。他们参与出院后随访的比例仅为4%。结论:药物安全实践方面的差距包括:有限地使用个体患者供应系统进行药物分配,高度依赖病房库存系统,以及高度依赖纸质系统进行药物处方和给药。在服务提供方面,应增加临床药师参与医疗调解服务、治疗药物监测和跨学科查房。出院和出院后服务是提供服务的主要差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Reducing adverse medication events in mental health: Australian National Survey.

Aim: To determine the extent to which evidence-based medication safety practices have been implemented in public and private mental health inpatient units across Australia.

Methods: The Reducing Adverse Medication Events in Mental Health survey was piloted in Victoria, Australia, in 2015, and rolled out nationally in 2016. In total, 235 mental health inpatient units from all States and Territories in Australia were invited to participate. The survey included questions about the demographics of the mental health unit, evidence-based strategies to improve prescription writing, the administration and dispensing of medicines and pharmacy-led interventions, and also questions relating to consumer engagement in medication management and shared decision-making.

Results: The response rate was 45% (N = 106 units). Overall, the survey found that 57% of the mental health units had fully or partially implemented evidence-based medication safety practices. High levels of implementation (80%) were reported for the use of standardized medication charts such as the National Inpatient Medication Chart as a way to improve medication prescription writing. Most (71%) of the units were using standardized forms for recording medication histories, and 56% were using designated forms for Medication Management Plans. However, less than one-fifth of the units had implemented electronic medication management systems, and the majority of units still relied on paper-based documentation systems.Interventions to improve medicine administration and dispensing were not highly utilized. Individual patient-based medication distribution systems were fully implemented in only 9% of the units, with a high reliance (81%) on ward stock or imprest systems. Tall Man lettering for labelling was implemented in only one-third of the units.Pharmacy services were well represented in mental health units, with 80% having access to onsite pharmacist services providing assessments of current medications and clinical review services, adverse drug reaction reporting and management services, patient and carer education and counselling, and medicines information services. However, pharmacists were involved in only half of medical reconciliations. Their involvement in post-discharge follow-up was limited to 4% of units.

Conclusions: Gaps in medication safety practices included limited use of individual patient supply systems for medication distribution, a high reliance on ward stock systems and high reliance on paper-based systems for medication prescribing and administration. With regards to service provision, clinical pharmacist involvement in medical reconciliation services, therapeutic drug monitoring and interdisciplinary ward rounds should be increased. Discharge and post-discharge services were major gaps in service provision.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
39
期刊介绍: ​​The International Journal of Evidence-Based Healthcare is the official journal of the Joanna Briggs Institute. It is a fully refereed journal that publishes manuscripts relating to evidence-based medicine and evidence-based practice. It publishes papers containing reliable evidence to assist health professionals in their evaluation and decision-making, and to inform health professionals, students and researchers of outcomes, debates and developments in evidence-based medicine and healthcare. ​ The journal provides a unique home for publication of systematic reviews (quantitative, qualitative, mixed methods, economic, scoping and prevalence) and implementation projects including the synthesis, transfer and utilisation of evidence in clinical practice. Original scholarly work relating to the synthesis (translation science), transfer (distribution) and utilization (implementation science and evaluation) of evidence to inform multidisciplinary healthcare practice is considered for publication. The journal also publishes original scholarly commentary pieces relating to the generation and synthesis of evidence for practice and quality improvement, the use and evaluation of evidence in practice, and the process of conducting systematic reviews (methodology) which covers quantitative, qualitative, mixed methods, economic, scoping and prevalence methods. In addition, the journal’s content includes implementation projects including the transfer and utilisation of evidence in clinical practice as well as providing a forum for the debate of issues surrounding evidence-based healthcare.
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