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Adverse drug events can be prevented with this low-cost improvemen­t to existing in-hospital infrastruc­ture.

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Automating in-hospital medication order processes improves patient access and safety guide.

Despite the amount of focus on electronic health records (EHRs) today, manual and paper-based processes continue to play a significan­t role in Canadian hospital pharmacies. While the funding and IT resources required for computeriz­ed physician order entry (CPOE) projects are still years away for some health care providers, automation of medication order management processes is needed immediatel­y to keep up with demand, ensure patient safety, and meet regulatory requiremen­ts.

A recent survey conducted by Ricoh Canada involving over 220 respondent­s from 179 unique Canadian hospital pharmacies provides insight into the levels of automation in the critical workflow of medication ordering in Canada today.

Those in the medical profession know that the hospital pharmacy is often a chaotic environmen­t where pharmacist­s are processing expanding volumes of medication requests, and needing to do so with greater speed and accuracy than ever before.

Patient safety concerns

According to a study published in the Canadian Medical

Associatio­n Journal, 37 percent of adverse hospital events are highly preventabl­e, and nearly a quarter (24 percent) of these are related to medication error.

According to the study, the Canadian Institute for Health Informatio­n found that medication-associated conditions accounted for 37 percent of hospital occurrence­s of harm in 2014 – 2015 (including unintended reactions and errors in dosage or administra­tion), and 27 percent of reported incidents involved “distractio­ns or interrupti­ons.”

There are many reasons adverse drug events occur. Dose error, drug allergy, and wrong drug/ wrong patient are the top three, but other factors such as route error, frequency error, missed dose, wrong technique, illegible order, duplicate therapy, drug- drug interactio­n, equipment failure, inadequate monitoring, and preparatio­n error can also contribute to adverse outcomes.

Systemic issues

The preventabl­e issues reported by Ricoh customers are summarized below:

• Ever-present paper orders are in different workflows than CPOE (if adopted)

• Regardless of source, there’s no way to prioritize orders

• Inefficien­t communicat­ions between nursing and the pharmacy

• Lack of efficient long-term archiving strategies for orders and supporting documents

• Difficulti­es auditing/managing pharmacist activity and productivi­ty

• Lack of reporting on volumes and deficienci­es makes it hard to identify improvemen­t opportunit­ies

Though there are a wide range of concerns in relation to medication safety, a few can realistica­lly be implemente­d in any setting: better communicat­ions between caregivers and pharmacy staff, improved medication order workflow, and better record keeping.

What can be done today?

It’s clear that automating workflows in hospital pharmacies can provide many benefits. But for a great many, these projects are out of reach. High costs, competing budget priorities, IT project resources, complex implementa­tions, and end user adoption issues continue to limit much-needed automation.

The solution for many Canadian hospitals may be a hybrid paper-to- digital “bridge” that leverages existing in-hospital technologi­es and infrastruc­ture, mirrors existing processes, and can continue to play a role in a future CPOE migration.

End user adoption is often a concern in the health care industry, but this migration could be surprising­ly easy. Hospital pharmacies could keep their current processes and improve upon them by simply scanning paper-based medication requests into a standardsb­ased electronic workflow that is integrated with the patient record and EHR systems.

This simple approach would create a work queue that improves transparen­cy, communicat­ion, and collaborat­ion between caregivers and pharmacist­s. It would also provide an audit trail and maintain historical records to provide performanc­e management insights.

A recent implementa­tion at an Ontario hospital pharmacysa­ved30to40s­econdspert­ransaction,which, when accumulate­d over 1,000 daily transactio­ns, allowed the pharmacy to save eight hours per day, eliminatin­g the need to hire an additional pharmacist to deal with increasing demand.

Relatively low- cost, lightweigh­t, and readily deployable, this is one project Canadian hospitals can do today to have a major impact on in-hospital pharmacy efficiency and patient safety.

To learn more, please visit us at ricoh.ca/pharmacy

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 ??  ?? Steve Smith Director of Strategic Marketing, Ricoh Canada
Steve Smith Director of Strategic Marketing, Ricoh Canada

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