Reducing medication errors at admission: 3 cycles to implement, improve and sustain medication reconciliation

Niccolo Curatolo, Loriane Gutermann, Niaz Devaquet, Sandrine Roy, André Rieutord

Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

21 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

Background In France, medication errors are the third leading cause of serious adverse events. Many studies have shown the positive impact of medication reconciliation (MR) on reducing medication errors at admission but this practice is still rarely implemented in French hospitals. Objective Implement and sustain a MR process at admission in two surgery units. The quality improvement approach used to meet this objective is described. Setting The gastrointestinal surgery and orthopedic surgery departments of a 407 inpatient bed French teaching hospital Methods A step by step collaborative approach based on plan–do–study–act (PDSA) cycles. Three cycles were successively performed with regular feedback during multidisciplinary meetings. Main outcome measure: mean unintended medication discrepancies (UMDs) per patients at admission. Results The three PDSA cycles and the monitoring phase allowed to implement, optimize and sustain a MR process in the two surgery units. Cycle 1, by showing a rate of 0.65 UMDs at admission (95 % CI 0.39–0.91), underlined the need for a MR process; cycle 2 showed how the close-collaboration between pharmacy and surgery units could help to reduce mean UMDs per patients at admission (0.18; 95 % CI 0.09–0.27) (p < 0.001); finally, cycle 3 allowed the optimization of the MR process by reducing the delays of the best possible medication history availability. Conclusions This work highlights how a collaborative quality-improvement approach based on PDSA cycles can meet the challenge of implementing MR to improve medication management at admission.

langue originaleAnglais
Pages (de - à)113-120
Nombre de pages8
journalInternational Journal of Clinical Pharmacy
Volume37
Numéro de publication1
Les DOIs
étatPublié - 1 févr. 2015
Modification externeOui

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