Transcript Document

Is it Dilantin, Dilaudid or Diltiazem?
Edward R. Sobel, D.O.
Medical Director, Quality Insights of Delaware
Family Practice Associates, PA
Objectives
Reduce the rate of prescribing errors
Avoid drug interactions
Empower nursing into clinical decision making
Onymnomycin 300mg
1 qid until finished
#40
0 refills
Transfer Errors
92-year-old male is transferred from inpatient hospital
care.
He has been in the hospital four times in the last three
months
The patient begins to decline unexpectedly
He develops CHF and is readmitted for the fifth time
but ultimately succumbs to the disease process
What was the cause of his death?
Transfer Errors
An elderly patient is discharged to OP care
following hospitalization for CAD
He is seen in the office about 10 days following
DC, c/o extreme fatigue – “I feel well, doc, but
I just have no energy.”
What was the cause of his excessive fatigue?
Where Are There Errors?
Scribbling of meds on the transfer form
Duplicate medications in the same therapeutic
class
“Resume all previous medications”
No discharge medication sheet or instructions
Change of pill color, shape, dosage
Multiple pharmacy source
What Can We Do to Make
Administration of Medications Safer?
List all the medications, prescription medications,
over-the-counter drugs and any vitamin and herbal
supplements they take
Educate the elderly person about their medications,
including the desired effects, and be familiar with
the instructions on how and when to take the
medication, possible side effects and drug
interactions
What Can We Do to Make
Administration of Medications Safer?
Develop a medication usage sheet. A medication list
should include the following:
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Name of the medication, color and shape
Dosage and frequency
Reason they are taking the medication
The date they started taking the medication
The prescribing physician's name and contact information
– Any special instructions and/or side effects about the
medication
What Can We Do to Make
Administration of Medications Safer?
It is important to have all the medications filled at only one
pharmacy. It can be very helpful to develop a relationship
with one of the pharmacists where the elder picks up their
medications. Pharmacists are well trained and can answer
their questions about possible drug interactions, side
effects and contraindications that their health care clinician
may not tell them.
Keep a list of all the medications the elderly are taking on
the refrigerator or by the main telephone they use in a
brightly colored folder clearly marked.
What Can We Do to Make
Administration of Medications Safer?
Ensure that the medications are stored properly
(away from the heat or in the refrigerator), and
discard any drugs that have expired or have no
labels
Instruct the elderly to put on a light when taking
medications and never take their drugs in the dark
What Can We Do to Make
Administration of Medications Safer?
If the elderly person utilizes a pill box, always have
them keep at least one pill in the original medication
container for identification purposes
Never have the elderly mix more than one medication
in a pill container, especially when traveling
Always have the elderly bring a list of all of the
medications they are currently taking when going to a
physician appointment
What Can We Do to Make
Administration of Medications Safer?
You may ask the pharmacist for medication
labels in a larger print size, home delivery
services, easy to open containers and senior
citizen discounts
Read more: How to Prevent Medication Errors in the Elderly,
http://www.ehow.com/how_5464552_prevent-medicationerrors-elderly.html#ixzz10wCOWuXQ
Does All This Really Work?
Objective: To investigate whether a Medication Report can reduce the number of medication errors when
elderly patients are discharged from hospital. Method: We conducted a prospective intervention with
retrospective controls on patients at three departments at Lund University Hospital, Sweden that were
transferred to primary care. The intervention group, where patients received a Medication Report at discharge,
was compared with a control group with patients of the same age, who were not given a Medication Report
when discharged from the same ward one year earlier. Main outcome measures: The main outcome measure
was the number of medication errors when elderly patients were discharged from hospital. Results: Among
248 patients in the intervention group, 79 (32%) had at least one medication error as compared with 118
(66%) among the 179 patients in the control group. In the intervention group, 15% of the patients had errors
that were considered to have moderate or high risk of clinical consequences compared with 32% in the
control group. The differences were statistically significant (P < 0.001). Conclusion: Medication errors are
common when elderly patients are discharged from hospital. The Medication Report is a simple tool that
reduces the number of medication errors.
Medication report reduces number of medication errors when elderly patients are discharged from hospital
Patrik Midlov, Lydia Holmdahl, Tommy Eriksson, Anna Bergkvist, Bengt Ljungberg, Håkan Widner,
Christina Nerbrand and Peter Höglund
Pharmacy World & Science
Volume 30, Number 1, 92-98, DOI: 10.1007/s11096-007-9149-4
Thank you
This material was prepared by Quality Insights of Delaware, the Medicare Quality Improvement Organization for
Delaware, under contract with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), an agency of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services. The contents presented do not necessarily reflect CMS policy.
Publication number 9SOW-DE-PS-KD-102610. App. 10/10.