使用英格兰和威尔士国家报告和学习系统(NRLS)数据分析出院后用药安全事件的性质和影响因素:一项多方法研究

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q2 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Fatema A Alqenae, Douglas Steinke, Andrew Carson-Stevens, Richard N Keers
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引用次数: 1

摘要

导言:改善护理过渡期间的用药安全是国际卫生保健的优先事项。虽然现有研究表明,与药物有关的事件和相关危害在出院后可能很常见,但在国家一级,关于其性质和促成因素的信息有限,这对告知改进战略至关重要。目的:描述从二级保健过渡到初级保健期间药物相关事件的性质和影响因素。方法:回顾性分析2015年至2019年英格兰和威尔士国家报告和学习系统(NRLS)报告的用药事件。描述性分析确定了事件的频率和性质,并对免费文本数据进行了内容分析,使用患者安全研究小组(PISA)分类进行编码,检查了事件的促成因素和结果。结果:共分析了1121例药物相关事件报告。大多数事件涉及65岁以上的患者(55%,n = 626/1121)。超过十分之一(12.6%,n = 142/1121)的事件与患者伤害有关。药物监测阶段(17%)和给药阶段(15%)与有害事件的相关比例高于任何其他用药阶段。与事件相关的常见药物类别是心血管系统(n = 734)和中枢神经系统(n = 273)。在报告467个促成因素的408起事件中,最常见的促成因素是组织因素(82%,n = 383/467)(主要与护理的连续性有关,即通过整合、协调和不同提供者之间的信息共享提供无缝服务),其次是工作人员因素(16%,n = 75/467)。结论:出院后用药事件与患者伤害相关。确定了未来研究的几个目标,这些目标可以支持补救干预措施的发展,包括常见的观察药物类别、老年人、增加患者参与和改善出院后药物监测的共享护理协议。简明扼要:研究使用主要由医疗保健专业人员撰写的关于不安全或不合格护理的报告,以更好地了解出院后药物安全问题的类型和原因。为什么要进行这项研究?出院后安全用药已被世界卫生组织强调为改善病人护理的一项重要目标。然而,在英格兰和威尔士,人们对发生的药物问题的类型及其原因知之甚少,这可能会阻碍我们努力创造改善护理的方法,因为它们可能不是基于我们所知道的首先导致问题的原因。研究人员做了什么?研究小组研究了在英格兰和威尔士收集的5年期间的药物安全事件报告,以便更好地了解出院后会出现什么样的药物安全问题以及为什么会发生,从而我们可以找到防止它们在未来发生的方法。研究人员发现了什么?研究的事件报告总数为1121,其中大多数(n = 626)涉及老年人。超过十分之一的此类事件对患者造成了伤害。涉及药物安全事件的最常见药物是用于高血压等心血管疾病、精神疾病、疼痛和神经系统疾病(例如癫痫)等病症以及糖尿病等其他疾病。这些事件最常见的原因是由于组织规则,如信息共享,其次是员工问题,如不遵守协议,个人错误和没有正确的技能来完成任务。这些发现意味着什么?这项研究已经确定了一些重要的目标,这些目标可以成为未来努力提高出院后药物安全使用的重点。这些措施包括集中关注心血管和中枢神经系统的药物治疗(例如,通过将其纳入处方安全指标和药物优先排序工具),员工技能组合(例如,在怀疑风险最大的护理途径的关键部分嵌入临床药师角色),以及实施电子干预措施,以改善医疗保健提供者之间药物和其他信息的及时沟通。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Analysis of the nature and contributory factors of medication safety incidents following hospital discharge using National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) data from England and Wales: a multi-method study.

Analysis of the nature and contributory factors of medication safety incidents following hospital discharge using National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) data from England and Wales: a multi-method study.

Analysis of the nature and contributory factors of medication safety incidents following hospital discharge using National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) data from England and Wales: a multi-method study.

Analysis of the nature and contributory factors of medication safety incidents following hospital discharge using National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) data from England and Wales: a multi-method study.

Introduction: Improving medication safety during transition of care is an international healthcare priority. While existing research reveals that medication-related incidents and associated harms may be common following hospital discharge, there is limited information about their nature and contributory factors at a national level which is crucial to inform improvement strategy.

Aim: To characterise the nature and contributory factors of medication-related incidents during transition of care from secondary to primary care.

Method: A retrospective analysis of medication incidents reported to the National Reporting and Learning System (NRLS) in England and Wales between 2015 and 2019. Descriptive analysis identified the frequency and nature of incidents and content analysis of free text data, coded using the Patient Safety Research Group (PISA) classification, examined the contributory factors and outcome of incidents.

Results: A total of 1121 medication-related incident reports underwent analysis. Most incidents involved patients over 65 years old (55%, n = 626/1121). More than one in 10 (12.6%, n = 142/1121) incidents were associated with patient harm. The drug monitoring (17%) and administration stages (15%) were associated with a higher proportion of harmful incidents than any other drug use stages. Common medication classes associated with incidents were the cardiovascular (n = 734) and central nervous (n = 273) systems. Among 408 incidents reporting 467 contributory factors, the most common contributory factors were organisation factors (82%, n = 383/467) (mostly related to continuity of care which is the delivery of a seamless service through integration, co-ordination, and the sharing of information between different providers), followed by staff factors (16%, n = 75/467).

Conclusion: Medication incidents after hospital discharge are associated with patient harm. Several targets were identified for future research that could support the development of remedial interventions, including commonly observed medication classes, older adults, increase patient engagement, and improve shared care agreement for medication monitoring post hospital discharge.

Plain language summary: Study using reports about unsafe or substandard care mainly written by healthcare professionals to better understand the type and causes of medication safety problems following hospital discharge Why was the study done? The safe use of medicines after hospital discharge has been highlighted by the World Health Organization as an important target for improvement in patient care. Yet, the type of medication problems which occur, and their causes are poorly understood across England and Wales, which may hamper our efforts to create ways to improve care as they may not be based on what we know causes the problem in the first place.What did the researchers do? The research team studied medication safety incident reports collected across England and Wales over a 5-year period to better understand what kind of medication safety problems occur after hospital discharge and why they happen, so we can find ways to prevent them from happening in future.What did the researchers find? The total number of incident reports studied was 1121, and the majority (n = 626) involved older people. More than one in ten of these incidents caused harm to patients. The most common medications involved in the medication safety incidents were for cardiovascular diseases such as high blood pressure, conditions such as mental illness, pain and neurological conditions (e.g., epilepsy) and other illnesses such as diabetes. The most common causes of these incidents were because of the organisation rules, such as information sharing, followed by staff issues, such as not following protocols, individual mistakes and not having the right skills for the task.What do the findings mean? This study has identified some important targets that can be a focus of future efforts to improve the safe use of medicines after hospital discharge. These include concentrating attention on medication for the cardiovascular and central nervous systems (e.g., via incorporating them in prescribing safety indicators and pharmaceutical prioritisation tools), staff skill mix (e.g., embedding clinical pharmacist roles at key parts of the care pathway where greatest risk is suspected), and implementation of electronic interventions to improve timely communication of medication and other information between healthcare providers.

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来源期刊
Therapeutic Advances in Drug Safety
Therapeutic Advances in Drug Safety Medicine-Pharmacology (medical)
CiteScore
6.70
自引率
4.50%
发文量
31
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: Therapeutic Advances in Drug Safety delivers the highest quality peer-reviewed articles, reviews, and scholarly comment on pioneering efforts and innovative studies pertaining to the safe use of drugs in patients. The journal has a strong clinical and pharmacological focus and is aimed at clinicians and researchers in drug safety, providing a forum in print and online for publishing the highest quality articles in this area. The editors welcome articles of current interest on research across all areas of drug safety, including therapeutic drug monitoring, pharmacoepidemiology, adverse drug reactions, drug interactions, pharmacokinetics, pharmacovigilance, medication/prescribing errors, risk management, ethics and regulation.
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