Improving patient discharge process using electronic medication input tool and on-line guide to arranging follow-ups
Autor: | Rory Barr, Keefai Yeong, Kuen Yeow Chin |
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Rok vydání: | 2013 |
Předmět: |
BMJ Quality Improvement Programme
business.industry Psychological intervention Retrospective cohort study General Medicine Audit computer.software_genre medicine.disease Wizard Patient safety Documentation Medicine Patient Safety Data mining Medical emergency Medical prescription business computer Medication list |
Zdroj: | BMJ Quality Improvement Reports |
ISSN: | 2050-1315 |
DOI: | 10.1136/bmjquality.u756.w711 |
Popis: | Complete, accurate and timely discharge summaries (TTOs) enable effective communication between hospital teams and GPs. It can prevent adverse events and reduce hospital readmission rates (1). If the discharge summary does not contain important information (e.g. follow-up arrangements, accurate discharge medication list), or if follow-up arrangements are not made, then patient care and outcome can be adversely affected (2,3). An electronic Medication Input Wizard was developed to improve the quality and reduce the error rates of TTOs. The Wizard makes entering drug information faster; prompts for reasons medication changes; provides examples for Controlled Drug (CD) prescribing; and prompts to refer patients taking warfarin to anticoagulation clinic. An on-line guide was developed which explains how to arrange investigations and appointments. Retrospective studies of TTOs were carried out before and after these interventions, analysing documentation of medication and completion of intended follow-up arrangements. A baseline audit found 65% of medication changes on TTOs were not clearly documented, and only 8% with changes documented reasons. 40% of prescriptions for CDs were incorrect delaying discharge by 4.9 hours per patient. 80% of intended follow-ups actually happened. After intervention, TTOs written using the Wizard had 100% of medication changes documented, and 75% were documented with reasons. CD errors decreased to 28% (76% of errors were done without using the Wizard). Follow-up arrangements that occurred increased to 86%. A survey showed 78% of Doctors reported the Wizard was faster than typing the details in separate textboxes, and 94% believed it was beneficial. Systems should be optimised to encourage better documentation of medication details and reduce prescribing errors. Guides that explain how to make follow-up arrangements should be accessible to Doctors, to make sure follow-ups are organised correctly. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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