ABSTRACT
Medication Reconciliation (MedRec) is a proven method of optimizing pharmacotherapy and decreasing incidence of Adverse Drug Events (ADEs); however, consistent and correct execution is often a challenge in the setting of outpatient oncology. Ambulatory chemotherapy patients are particularly susceptible to polypharmacy and ADEs and their medication management is often complicated due to gaps in communication between an increased volume of non-co-located, multidisciplinary, healthcare providers. Acknowledging these challenges, Winchester District Memorial Hospital (WDMH) led an initiative to create an ambulatory chemotherapy MedRec process using behavioural change approaches. Prior to the intervention, ambulatory chemotherapy MedRec at WDMH was conducted informally via an "open-loop" process. Through an iterative quality improvement process which involved understanding and communicating failure points in the transmission of patients' medication information directly with the frontline medical staff, a practical and sustainable "closed-loop" system evolved, which improved rates to 97.8% overall completion post-intervention.
Subject(s)
Ambulatory Care , Medical Oncology , Medication Reconciliation/organization & administration , Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions/prevention & control , Humans , Leadership , Ontario , Organizational Case StudiesABSTRACT
Developing and implementing a policy for safe pro re nata medications practices became a priority when 1 nurse questioned a regularly occurring double-range narcotic order. This article describes how double-range medications can compromise patient safety and how a small rural hospital with minimal resources was able to develop an interdisciplinary practice standard to ensure safe medication practices.