Taylor Laurel K, Kawasumi Yuko, Bartlett Gillian, Tamblyn Robyn
Department of Medicine, McGill University, QC.
Healthc Q. 2005;8 Spec No:81-5. doi: 10.12927/hcq..17669.
Adverse clinical events related to inappropriate prescribing practices are an important threat to patient safety. Avoidance of inappropriate prescribing in community settings, where the majority of prescriptions are written, offers a major area of opportunity to improve quality of care and outcomes. Electronic medication order entry systems, with automated clinical risk screening and online alerting capabilities, appear as particularly promising enabling tools in such settings. The Medical Office of the Twenty First Century (MOXXI-III) research group is currently utilizing such a system that integrates identification of dosing errors, adverse drug interactions, drug-disease and allergy contraindications and potential toxicity or contraindications based on patient age. This paper characterizes the spectrum of alerts in an urban community of care involving 28 physicians and 32 pharmacies. Over a consecutive nine-month period, alerts were generated in 29% of 22,419 prescriptions, resulting in revised prescriptions in 14% of the alert cases. Drug-disease contraindications were the most common driver of alerts, accounting for 41% of the total and resulting in revised prescriptions in 14% of cases. In contrast, potential dosing errors generated only 8% of all alerts, but resulted in revised prescriptions 23% of the time. Overall, online evidence-based screening and alerting around prescription of medications in a community setting demands confirmation in prescribers' clinical decision making in almost one-third of prescriptions and leads to changed decisions in up to one-quarter of some prescribing categories. Its ultimate determination of clinical relevance to patient safety may, however, have to await more detailed examination of physician response to alerts and patient outcomes as a primary measure of utility. Patient safety is an increasingly recognized challenge and opportunity for stakeholders in improving health care delivery. It involves many issues, including delayed diagnosis and treatment, as well as inappropriate undertreatment and overtreatment. The common denominators, however, are that care and outcomes could be better, and there is a role for patients, providers and policy makers in making improvements.
与不恰当处方行为相关的不良临床事件是对患者安全的重要威胁。在开具大多数处方的社区环境中避免不恰当处方,为改善医疗质量和治疗结果提供了一个重要的机会领域。具有自动临床风险筛查和在线警报功能的电子药物医嘱录入系统,在这种环境中似乎是特别有前景的支持工具。21世纪医疗办公室(MOXXI - III)研究小组目前正在使用这样一个系统,该系统整合了基于患者年龄的剂量错误识别、药物不良相互作用、药物 - 疾病及过敏禁忌以及潜在毒性或禁忌。本文描述了一个涉及28名医生和32家药房的城市医疗社区中的警报范围。在连续九个月的时间里,22419张处方中有29%产生了警报,其中14%的警报案例导致了处方的修改。药物 - 疾病禁忌是警报最常见的驱动因素,占总数的41%,导致14%的案例处方被修改。相比之下,潜在剂量错误仅产生了所有警报的8%,但导致23%的处方被修改。总体而言,在社区环境中围绕药物处方进行基于证据的在线筛查和警报,在近三分之一的处方中需要处方者在临床决策中进行确认,并在多达四分之一的某些处方类别中导致决策改变。然而,其对患者安全的临床相关性的最终确定可能必须等待对医生对警报的反应和患者结果进行更详细的检查,以此作为效用的主要衡量标准。患者安全是利益相关者在改善医疗服务中日益认识到的挑战和机遇。它涉及许多问题,包括诊断和治疗延迟,以及不恰当的治疗不足和过度治疗。然而,共同之处在于医疗和治疗结果可以更好,并且患者、提供者和政策制定者在做出改进方面都能发挥作用。