Title: Medicines Reconciliation A Whole System Approach
1Medicines ReconciliationA Whole System Approach
Every stage, every time for every patient!
- Arlene Coulson
- Principal Clinical Pharmacist, Specialist
Services - Gordon Thomson
- Principal Clinical Pharmacist, Urgent Care,
Medicine
2Why, What, Where, When, Who and How?
- Why implement Medicines Reconciliation?
- What should it consist of?
- Where and when it should occur?
- Who should carry it out?
- How should it be implemented?
3Why implement medicine reconciliation?
- Transitions from one healthcare setting to
another increase risk of adverse drug events and
contribute to avoidable hospital visits. - (Dedhia et al. 2009 Fernandes 2009 Jack et al.
2009 Ong et al. 2006)
- Improving processes directly improves outcomes.
- REDUCE RISK, HARM AND VARIATION!
4What should it consist of?
Discharge
Admission
Talk to Patient/ Family
Patient Own Drugs/list
Electronic medication records
Patients medicine chart
Electronic medication records
Medicine Reconciliation Documentation
Sources of Medicine Reconciliation
Sources of Medicine Reconciliation
Standardised Medication Reconciliation
Standardised Medication Reconciliation
Document in Electronic Discharge Documentation
Document in Medicines Reconciliation Documentation
5Medicines Reconciliation on admission
6Electronic Discharge Documentation
7Where and When should it occur?
GP Surgery
Community Pharmacy
e
e
Admission to hospital
Out patient
Different levels of care
8Medicines Reconciliation on admission to
hospital
Medicine Reconciliation on transfer of care
settings
Medicine Reconciliation at discharge
9Who Should Carry It Out?
- It is vital to have medical staff engagement
right from the beginning!!
- Testing/Implementation collaborative approach
with Medical and pharmacy staff - Any health professional can complete medicines
reconciliation! - Best to be part of the medical admission
documentation. - Medicine reconciliation is reviewed by clinical
pharmacist
10How should it be implemented?
- Breakdown each step in the process
- Identify the step with highest risk to fail -
start here! - Test on 1,3,5 patients (PDSA cycles) on
admission - Improve the process in this step so that its 95
reliable before moving to the other steps - Prevent failure by standardising the process
- Measure the process regularly to determine
reliability
11Measurement for improvement accuracy of
medicines reconciliation in Acute Surgical
Receiving Unit
12Next steps for improvement
Every stage, every time for every patient!
- Identify the gaps
- Map out current processes for medicine
reconciliation. - Map out the ideal process for medicine
reconciliation. - Measure the quality of medicines reconciliation
in all healthcare settings. - Invest in areas where its been identified there
is a gap. - Reduce variation in practice across NHS Tayside