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Effectiveness of a pharmacist-led quality improvement program to reduce medication errors during hospital discharge
George, Doris; Supramaniam, Nirmala D; Abd Hamid, Siti Q; Hassali, Mohamad A; Lim, Wei-Yin; Hss, Amar-Singh.
Affiliation
  • George, Doris; Raja Permaisuri Bainun Hospital. Pharmacy Department. Ipoh. Malaysia
  • Supramaniam, Nirmala D; Raja Permaisuri Bainun Hospital. Pharmacy Department. Ipoh. Malaysia
  • Abd Hamid, Siti Q; Raja Permaisuri Bainun Hospital. Pharmacy Department. Ipoh. Malaysia
  • Hassali, Mohamad A; Universiti Sains Malaysia. School of Pharmaceutical Sciences. Discipline of Social and Administrative Pharmacy. Gelugor. Malaysia
  • Lim, Wei-Yin; Ministry of Health. National Institutes of Health. Institute for Clinical Research. Center for Clinical Epidemiology. Malaysia
  • Hss, Amar-Singh; Ministry of Health. Raja Permaisuri Bainun Hospital. Pediatric Department. Ipoh. Malaysia
Pharm. pract. (Granada, Internet) ; 17(3): 0-0, jul.-sept. 2019. tab, graf
Article in En | IBECS | ID: ibc-188117
Responsible library: ES1.1
Localization: BNCS
ABSTRACT
Background: Patients requiring medications during discharge are at risk of discharge medication errors that potentially cause readmission due to medication-related events. Objective: The objective of this study was to develop interventions to reduce percentage of patients with one or more medication errors during discharge. Methods: A pharmacist-led quality improvement (QI) program over 6 months was conducted in medical wards at a tertiary public hospital. Percentage of patients discharge with one or more medication errors was reviewed in the pre-intervention and four main improvements were developed: increase the ratio of pharmacist to patient, prioritize discharge prescription order within office hours, complete discharge medication reconciliation by ward pharmacist, set up a Centralized Discharge Medication Pre-packing Unit. Percentage of patients with one or more medication errors in both pre- and post-intervention phase were monitored using process control chart. Results: With the implementation of the QI program, the percentage of patients with one or more medication errors during discharge that were corrected by pharmacists significantly increased from 77.6% to 95.9% (p<0.001). Percentage of patients with one or more clinically significant error was similar in both pre and post-QI with an average of 24.8%. Conclusions: Increasing ratio of pharmacist to patient to complete discharge medication reconciliation during discharge significantly recorded a reduction in the percentage of patients with one or more medication errors
RESUMEN
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Subject(s)

Full text: 1 Collection: 06-national / ES Database: IBECS Main subject: Pharmaceutical Services / Medication Reconciliation / Patient Discharge Summaries / Medication Errors Limits: Aged / Female / Humans / Male Language: En Journal: Pharm. pract. (Granada, Internet) Year: 2019 Document type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 06-national / ES Database: IBECS Main subject: Pharmaceutical Services / Medication Reconciliation / Patient Discharge Summaries / Medication Errors Limits: Aged / Female / Humans / Male Language: En Journal: Pharm. pract. (Granada, Internet) Year: 2019 Document type: Article