Title: Safety in our System: High Alert Medications
1Safety in our SystemHigh Alert Medications
- Lynn Eschenbacher, Pharm.D.
- Medication Safety Officer
- Duke University Hospital
2Case Study
- Physician ordered Norcuron (Vercuronium) for a
patient via Computerized Physician Order Entry
(CPOE) - Ordered via remote location- not at the bedside
- Accidentally prescribed for a patient on a
medical unit, meant for a patient in the ICU
3Case Study
- Pharmacist processed and prepared the infusion,
failing to recognize that a neuromuscular
blocking agent should never be sent to a medical
unit - Auxiliary labels placed on bag
- High Alert medication
- Paralyzing agent
- Pharmacy technician delivered to medical unit and
didnt question why not an ICU
4Case Study
- Independent double check performed by the nurses
to verify - Drug
- Pump settings
- Patient
- Infusion started and patient walked to the
bathroom - Patient fell to the floor once paralysis began to
set in
5Case Study
- Patient called for help
- Rapid response team responded
- Nurse questioned if new drug hung could have done
this - Physician immediately stopped the infusion
- Patient treated and no long-term effects
ISMP Medication Safety Alert! May 31, 2007 Volume
12 Issue 11
6What Happened?
- Entered on wrong patient in CPOE
- No confirmation of correct patient or hardstop in
CPOE for NMB outside of the ICU - Unfamiliarity with the medication
- Didnt ask for clarification or information about
the medication - Auxiliary labels not read
- Multiple providers involved
- 6 Rights
- Patient, drug, dose, route, time, response
- Others?
7How Do Errors Occur?
8Medication Safety Defined
- Adverse drug event (ADE)
- Any incident in which the use of a medication
(drug or biologic) at any dose, may have resulted
in an adverse outcome in a patient (JCAHO 2001) - Adverse Drug Reaction (ADR)
- A response to a drug that is noxious and
unintended, and that occurs at doses normally
used in man for the prophylaxis, diagnosis or
therapy of disease, or for the modification of
physiological function (WHO 1972) - Near Miss/Close Call
- Errors that have the capacity to cause injury,
but fail to do so, either by chance or because
they are intercepted (Leape 1995)
9High Alert Medications
- How does a medication get tagged high alert?
- A medication that is notorious for causing a lot
of medication errors. - A medication that requires an intern who has
worked for less than 10 hours in a row to write
for it. - A medication that requires special care because
if an error occurs it has the potential to result
in significant patient harm. - I have no idea.
10Answer
- A medication that is notorious for causing a lot
of medication errors. - A medication that requires an intern who has
worked for less than 10 hours in a row to write
for it. - A medication that requires special care because
if an error occurs it has the potential to result
in significant patient harm. - I have no idea.
11What Does the Evidence Tell Us?
- Warfarin and insulins caused
- One in every seven estimated adverse drug events
treated in emergency departments - More than a quarter of all estimated
hospitalizations - In the elderly, insulin, warfarin, and digoxin
were implicated in - One in every three estimated adverse drug events
treated in emergency departments - 41.5 of estimated hospitalizations
- Budnitz DS, Pollock DA, Weidenbach KN, et al.
National surveillance of emergency department
visits for outpatient adverse drug events. JAMA.
20062961858-1866.
12IHI 5 Million Lives Campaign
- Reducing Harm from High-Alert Medications
- The Goal
- Reduce harm from high-alert medications by 50 by
December 2008
13IHI 5 Million Lives Focus
- Anticoagulants
- Heparin and Warfarin
- Narcotics/Opiates
- Patient-Controlled Analgesia
- Insulin
- Sedatives
- e.g., Midazolam
14IHI Recommended Measures
- ADEs
- Related to Anticoagulant per 100 Admissions with
Anticoagulant Administered - Related to Insulin per 100 Admissions with
Insulin Administered - Related to Narcotic per 100 Admissions with
Narcotic Administered - Related to Sedative per 100 Admissions with
Sedative Administered - Percent of Patients Receiving
- Anticoagulant with Treatment Appropriately
Managed According to Protocol - Heparin with aPPT Outside Protocol Limits
- Insulin with Blood Glucose Level Outside Protocol
Limits - Insulin with Treatment Appropriately Managed
According to Protocol - Narcotic Who Receive Subsequent Treatment with
Naloxone - Narcotic with Treatment Appropriately Managed
According to Protocol - Sedative Who Receive Subsequent Treatment with
Flumazenil - Sedative with Treatment Appropriately Managed
According to Protocol - Warfarin with INR Outside Protocol Limits
15IHI Measure Examples
- The number of adverse drug events (ADEs)
associated with an anticoagulant per 100
admissions in which the patient was administered
at least one dose of an anticoagulant, as
detected using the IHI Global Trigger Tool (using
only the Medication Module and Care Module
triggers). - The percentage of patients receiving insulin with
blood glucose levels outside the safety limits
set by the hospitals insulin protocol during
insulin administration
16Duke University Hospital Approach
- Identify High Alert Medications
- Understand what causes harm at DUH
- Data analysis
- Decrease variation and standardize
- Develop long lasting solutions
- Involvement with front line staff up to senior
leadership - Demonstrate improvement with data
17Duke High Alert Medications
- Direct Thrombin Inhibitors
- Neuromuscular Blocking Agents
- IT administered medications
- Total Parenteral Nutrition (TPN)
- Antiarrhythmics (amiodarone IV, lidocaine IV,
dofetilide) - Vasopressors (dopamine, dobutamine, epinephrine,
norepinephrine, phenylephrine)
- Potassium IV
- Heparin IV
- Opiates
- Chemotherapy IV and IT
- Benzodiazepines
- Warfarin
- Insulin IV
18Selection of High Alert Medications
- Based on
- Previous medication errors
- Sentinel Events
- ISMP, USP and other national data
- Increased risk of causing significant patient
harm when they are involved in medication errors.
- Although mistakes may or may not be more common
with these drugs, the consequences of an error
are potentially more devastating to patients.
19Data Collection
- ISMP Quarterly Action Agenda
- IHI Trigger Tool
- Electronic Surveillance Tool
- Voluntary Reports
- Root Cause Analysis
- Failure Mode and Effect Analysis
20On-Line Reporting
Single Portal for all events Blood Transfusion
related, Falls, Patient Visitor issues,
Surgical/invasive, Treatment/testing, and
Equipment
21On-Line Reporting
22Areas of Focus
- Prescribing
- Preparation
- Dispensing
- Administration
- Monitoring
23Identification and Mitigation of Risk
- Analyze medication related events specific to
institution - Utilize scientific methodology to identify root
causes and opportunities for improvement - Multi-disciplinary teams to develop action items
to address the root causes - Culture and buy-in to adopt these improvements
- Mistake proof where possible to ensure long
lasting solutions
24Identification and Mitigation of Risk
- Analyze
- RCA, FMEA
- Scientific Methodology
- Six Sigma, PDSA, FADE
- Culture
- AHRQ Culture of Safety Survey
- Mistake Proofing
- Elimination, Replacement, Facilitation,
Detection, Mitigation
25Six Sigma
- Deployed January 2004
- 32 Black Belts
- 62 Green Belts
- DMAIC, DMADV, GE Workout, Lean, Change
Management - Six Sigma Oversight Committee with RAIL (rolling
action item list)
26Multidisciplinary Participation
- Official Physician champions for each effort
- Report out at several physician, nursing and
pharmacy forums - Clinical Peer Review Committee
- Clinical Practice Council
- Performance Improvement Oversight Committee
- Medication Safety Council
- Knowledge experts included
- Address Issues that have been identified
- Share your institutions data
27Example Mistake Proofing
28Insulin Examples
- Standardization to one IV insulin nomogram
- CPOE Insulin order sets (Subcutaneous and IV) and
can only order insulin from order set - Standardization of hypoglycemia treatment
protocol- placed in all patient charts - Nutrition and insulin
- Example Insulin administered at MN and tube feed
held at 3am due to residuals. What do you do?
29Insulin Advisor
30Opiate Examples
- Standardized the PCA concentrations available for
the adult population - CPOE
- Standardized ordering using a PCA orderset
- Added critical risk factor assessment
- Additional monitoring recommendations
- Lean body weight for dosing
- Hard stop for morphine PCA and ESRD
- RT consult for patients with sleep apnea
- Developed a pre-op screening electronic
assessment tool with the critical risk factors
related to potential oversedation highlighted in
red at the top of the electronic form - Developed pre-op screening education for patients
to help set realistic expectations for post-op
pain management
31PCA Advisor
32Pre-op screening alert
33Anticoagulation Examples
- Standardized ordering in CPOE (10/1/07)
- Direct Thrombin Inhibitors
- Heparin
- Warfarin
- Nursing protocol to alert physicians to returned
lab results and prompts for change in orders - Revised the pharmacist managed warfarin
monitoring form
34Warfarin Monitoring Form
35Look-Alike High Alert Drugs
36Look-Alike Drugs
37Look-Alike Drugs
38Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde
Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the
ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng
is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit
pclae. The rset can be a toatl mses and you can
sitll raed it wouthit porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae
the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by
istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.
39Look-Alike/Sound-Alike Drugs
- hydralazine hydroxyzine
- cerebyx celebrex
- vinblastine vincristine
- chlorpropamide chlorpromazine
- glipizide glyburide
- daunorubicin doxorubicin
40Look-Alike/Sound-Alike Drugs TALL MAN LETTERING
- hydrALAZINE hydrOXYzine
- ceREBYX ceLEBRex
- vinBLASTine vinCRIStine
- chlorproPAMIDE chlorproMAZINE
- glipiZIDE glyBURIDE
- DAUNOrubicin DOXOrubicin
41DUH Look Alike/Sound Alike Efforts
- TallMan Lettering
- Smart Pumps, Automated Dispensing Cabinets,
Medication Administration Record, bin in the
central pharmacy, storeroom, IV room and
satellites - Future CPOE, Pharmacy computer system
- Posters highlighting similar products
- Example Ephedrine and Promethazine
42Communication and Education
- Key to Success
- Often an after thought, but needs to be part of
the efforts - Staff and Faulty
- Medication Safety Minutes
- Flyers
- Grand Rounds
- Patients
- Brochures
- Pamphlets
- Videos
43Medication Safety Flyer
44Medication Safety Flyer
45Demonstration of Improvement
- Current
- Balanced Scorecard (BSC)
- Reduction in ADEs resulting in harm
- Reduction in ADEs resulting in harm specific to
opiates and insulin - Increase in overall reporting
- Future
- Incorporation of ADE-Surveillance (Triggers) on
BSC - IHI Global Trigger tool
46Balanced Scorecard
47Critical Success Factors
- DUHS establishes priorities within each quadrant
of the Balanced Scorecard. - Clinical Quality, Customer, Finance, Work Culture
- Critical Success Factors (CSFs) help to
communicate and measure these priorities. - The CSFs cascade down throughout lower level
scorecards within the organization and support
the DUHS vision and strategy.
48Demonstration of Improvement
- Individual projects
- Process measures
- Outcome measures
- Unique to projects
- Oversight by Core Safety Team for Clinical
Service Line or by Six Sigma Oversight Committee
49What We Know About Making Errors
- All of us make errors
- Errors are not made on purpose
- No one wants to admit errors if they know
punishment is the result - Error ? Bad Behavior
- Errors happen for a reason
-
Lucian Leape, MD
50Medication Safety
- Bottom Line If the system is not fixed ? the
same error will happen again