Title: International Conference on Patient Safety
1International Conference on Patient Safety
Medication activities in the USA Role of the
Institute for Safe Medication Practices November
16, 2006
- Michael R. Cohen, RPh, MS, ScD
- Institute for Safe Medication Practices
- mcohen_at_ismp.org
2 USP-ISMP Medication Errors Reporting Program
Operated by theUnited States Pharmacopeia in
cooperationwith the Institute for Safe
Medication Practices www.ismp.org
Pennsylvania Patient Safety Reporting Program
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7PhRMA industry
- FDA-ISMP-PhRMA Workshop on Drug Name Risk
Management Strategies - Still lacks system-based thinking in addressing
errors - Lack of standards for package labeling hampers
improvement - No contact number for problem reporting
- No Recalls not made for known problems, even
after changes made
8United States Pharmacopeia
- Center for Patient Safety
- MedMarx Program and USP-ISMP MERP
- Safe Medication Use Expert Committee
- Safety considered in drug standards
- National Coordinating Committee on Medication
Error Reporting and Prevention
9Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations (JCAHO)National Patient Safety
Goals
- Sentinel event advisory group
- Sentinel event reporting
- Sentinel event newsletter
- Other sources including ISMP
10You can get much farther with a kind word and a
gun than you can with a kind word alone.
Al Capone
11JCAHO
12Preventing Medication Errors
Institute of Medicine Committee on Quality of
Health Care in America
13Error reporting
- Improved error reporting
- Report suggests that all stakeholders, including
accreditation agencies, state professional
boards, and relevant state and federal agencies,
should promote medication error reporting more
aggressively.
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15Oversight of community pharmacy practice
- Community pharmacy safety initiatives that should
be required by licensing boards are suggested,
including quality improvement activities.
16Oversight of community pharmacy practice
- The Committee recognized that, with few
exceptions, there is currently little medication
safety oversight of community pharmacies. - The report notes, "State boards do send surveyors
out, but they may or may not be pharmacists. What
they look for are issues related to state
practice acts there is no focus on the types of
issues that parallel the requirements hospital
pharmacies must meet under the National Patient
Safety Goals"
17Role of FDA, Industry and Safety Organizations
- Important to medication safety is recognition of
the role of FDA and the pharmaceutical industry
in eliminating medical product errors. - The report specifically calls upon "industry,
AHRQ, FDA, and others as appropriate (e.g., USP,
ISMP)" to work together to undertake actions to
address medical product issues such as labeling
and packaging and drug naming.
18Role of professional schools
- Noting that safety education is lacking in
professional schools, the Committee also called
upon academic accreditation agencies to set new
standards for this training.
19Role of FDA, Industry and Safety Organizations
- The FDA should develop two guidance documents for
industry one for drug naming and another for
labeling and packaging. The FDA and industry
should collaborate to develop (1) a common drug
nomenclature that standardizes abbreviations,
acronyms, and terms to the extent possible, and
(2) methods of applying failure modes and effects
analysis to labeling and packaging.
20Action Agenda for Health Care Organizations
- Specific recommendations for prescribers,
pharmacists, nurses to improve safety - Importance of safety culture
- Discusses importance of oversight from JCAHO
(NPSGs) and NQF Safe Practices
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24Action Agendas for Oversight, Regulation, and
Payment
- Oversight and regulatory organizations and payers
should use legislation, regulation,
accreditation, and payment mechanisms and the
media to motivate the adoption of practices and
technologies that can reduce medication errors,
and to ensure that that professionals have the
competencies required to deliver medications
safely.
25Action Agendas for Oversight, Regulation, and
Payment
- Payers and purchasers should continue to motivate
improvement in the medication-use process through
explicit financial incentives.
26Action Agendas for Oversight, Regulation, and
Payment
- CMS should evaluate a variety of strategies for
delivering medication therapy management. - Regulators, accreditors, and legislators should
set minimum functionality standards for error
prevention technologies. - States should enact legislation consistent with
and complementary to the Medicare Modernization
Acts e-prescribing provisions and remove
existing barriers to e-prescribing.
27Action Agenda for Health Care Organizations
- By 2008, all prescribers should have plans in
place to write prescriptions electronically, and
by 2010, all prescribers should write
prescriptions and all pharmacies should be able
to receive them electronically. - Subject prescriptions to evidence-based, current
clinical decision support. - Have the appropriate competencies for each step
of the medication use process.
28Action Agenda for Health Care Organizations
- Make effective use of well-designed technologies,
which will vary by setting. - Use of bar coding, smart pumps, etc.