Medication incident recovery and prevention utilising an Australian community pharmacy incident reporting system: the QUMwatch study

被引:6
作者
Adie, Khaled [1 ]
Fois, Romano A. [1 ]
McLachlan, Andrew J. [1 ]
Chen, Timothy F. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sydney, Fac Med & Hlth, Sydney Pharm Sch, Sydney, NSW, Australia
关键词
Medication safety; Medication errors; Error recovery; Near miss; Incident analysis; Patient safety; Community pharmacy; Primary care; ADVERSE DRUG EVENTS; INFORMATION-TECHNOLOGY; GENERAL-PRACTICE; PATIENT SAFETY; ERROR RECOVERY; PRIMARY-CARE; BURDEN INDEX; HEALTH-CARE; MEDICINES; SERVICES;
D O I
10.1007/s00228-020-03075-9
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
Purpose To identify factors in community pharmacy that facilitate error recovery from medication incidents (MIs) and explore medication safety prevention strategies from the pharmacist perspective. Methods Thirty community pharmacies in Sydney, Australia, participated in a 30-month prospective incident reporting program of MIs classified in the Advanced Incident Management System (AIMS) and the analysis triangulated with case studies. The main outcome measures were the relative frequencies and patterns in MI detection, minimisation, restorative actions and prevention recommendations of community pharmacists. Results Participants reported 1013 incidents with 831 recovered near misses and 165 purported patient harm. MIs were mainly initiated at the prescribing (68.2%) and dispensing (22.6%) stages, and most were resolved at the pharmacy (76.9%). Detection was efficient within the first 24 h in 54.6% of MIs, but 26.1% required one month or longer; 37.2% occurred after the patient consumed the medicine. The combination of specific actions/attributes (85.5%), appropriate interventions (81.6%) and effective communication (77.7%) minimised MIs. An array of remedial actions were conducted by participants including notification, referral, advice, modification of medication regimen, risk management and documentation corrections. Recommended prevention strategies involved espousal of medication safety culture (97.8%), better application of policies/procedures (84.6%) and improvements in healthcare providers' education (79.9%). Conclusion Incident reporting provided insights on the human and organisational factors involved in the recovery of MIs in community pharmacy. Optimising existing safeguards and redesigning certain structures and processes may enhance the resilience of the medication use system in primary care.
引用
收藏
页码:1381 / 1395
页数:15
相关论文
共 83 条
[31]   Impact of the Pharmacist Medication Review Services on Drug-Related Problems and Potentially Inappropriate Prescribing of Renally Cleared Medications in Residents of Aged Care Facilities [J].
Gheewala, Pankti A. ;
Peterson, Gregory M. ;
Curtain, Colin M. ;
Nishtala, Prasad S. ;
Hannan, Paul J. ;
Castelino, Ronald L. .
DRUGS & AGING, 2014, 31 (11) :825-835
[32]   Medication incidents in primary care medicine: protocol of a study by the Swiss Federal Sentinel Reporting System [J].
Gnaedinger, Markus ;
Ceschi, Alessandro ;
Conen, Dieter ;
Herzig, Lilli ;
Puhan, Milo ;
Staehelin, Alfred ;
Zoller, Marco .
BMJ OPEN, 2015, 5 (04)
[33]   Continuous Medication Monitoring (CoMM): A foundational model to support the clinical work of community pharmacists [J].
Goedken, Amber M. ;
Butler, Christine M. ;
McDonough, Randal P. ;
Deninger, Michael J. ;
Doucette, William R. .
RESEARCH IN SOCIAL & ADMINISTRATIVE PHARMACY, 2018, 14 (01) :106-111
[34]  
Greenwood S., 2019, J PRESCR PRACT, V1, P290, DOI [10.12968/jprp.2019.1.6.290, DOI 10.12968/JPRP.2019.1.6.290]
[35]   If only .... : failed, missed and absent error recovery opportunities in medication errors [J].
Habraken, M. M. P. ;
van der Schaaf, T. W. .
QUALITY & SAFETY IN HEALTH CARE, 2010, 19 (01) :37-41
[36]  
Harris DM., 2005, ADV PATIENT SAFETY R
[37]   Fix and forget or fix and report: a qualitative study of tensions at the front line of incident reporting [J].
Hewitt, Tanya Anne ;
Chreim, Samia .
BMJ QUALITY & SAFETY, 2015, 24 (05) :303-310
[38]   Solidarity or dissonance? A systematic review of pharmacist and GP views on community pharmacy services in the UK [J].
Hindi, Ali M. K. ;
Jacobs, Sally ;
Schafheutle, Ellen, I .
HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY, 2019, 27 (03) :565-598
[39]  
Hollnagel E., 2015, From safety I to safety II: a white paper
[40]   Resilient Health Care - Making steady progress [J].
Hollnagel, Erik ;
Sujan, Mark ;
Braithwaite, Jeffrey .
SAFETY SCIENCE, 2019, 120 :781-782