Saad Aline H, Sweet Burgunda V, Stumpf Janice L, Gruppen Larry, Oh Mary, Stevenson James G
Department of Pharmacy Services, University of Michigan Hospitals and Health Centers (UMHHC), Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0008, USA.
Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2007 Oct 1;64(19):2050-4. doi: 10.2146/ajhp070001.
Pharmacist recognition of and adherence to medication-use policies and safety practices were assessed.
Simulation testing was used to assess the performance of pharmacists in hypothetical scenarios simulating real-life situations. Fifty test case medication orders were developed, some requiring specific intervention and some requiring no special action. Orders were classified into four categories: those posing safety concerns n ( = 16), those with formulary and product standardization issues (n = 4), those with pharmacy and therapeutics (P&T) committee restrictions (n = 4), and those requiring no special action (n = 26). Potential barriers to compliance were identified by the project team and the orders categorized accordingly. The orders were processed by 25 pharmacists using a simulation testing procedure. Data were analyzed by pharmacists' demographics, order category, and perceived barriers to compliance.
Pharmacists were correctly able to recognize 77.3% of test orders: 67.3% with safety concerns, 98.9% with formulary issues, and 98.5% with restrictions. Appropriate action was taken with 74.2% of test orders: 64.5% of safety orders, 96.6% of formulary orders, and 92.4% of restriction orders. There was no correlation between pharmacists' performance and demographic characteristics. The two barriers to correct response identified most often were ambiguous responsibility and low perceived level of importance.
Pharmacists generally recognized and took appropriate action with simulated medication orders that contained problems related to formulary or P&T committee restrictions. They were less able to recognize and act appropriately on orders with safety-related problems. Ambiguous responsibility and low perceived importance were the most significant factors contributing to noncompliance with P&T committee policies and guidelines.
评估药剂师对用药政策和安全规范的认知及遵守情况。
采用模拟测试评估药剂师在模拟现实场景中的表现。制定了50个测试用例医嘱,有些需要特定干预,有些则无需特殊行动。医嘱分为四类:存在安全问题的(n = 16)、存在处方集和产品标准化问题的(n = 4)、存在药学与治疗学(P&T)委员会限制的(n = 4)以及无需特殊行动的(n = 26)。项目团队确定了合规的潜在障碍,并据此对医嘱进行分类。25名药剂师使用模拟测试程序处理这些医嘱。数据根据药剂师的人口统计学特征、医嘱类别以及感知到的合规障碍进行分析。
药剂师能够正确识别77.3%的测试医嘱:存在安全问题的医嘱识别率为67.3%,存在处方集问题的为98.9%,存在限制的为98.5%。74.2%的测试医嘱采取了适当行动:安全医嘱的采取率为64.5%,处方集医嘱的为96.6%,限制医嘱的为92.4%。药剂师的表现与人口统计学特征之间没有相关性。最常被识别出的导致正确回应的两个障碍是职责不明确和重要性感知水平低。
药剂师通常能够识别并对包含与处方集或P&T委员会限制相关问题的模拟用药医嘱采取适当行动。他们对存在安全相关问题的医嘱识别和采取适当行动的能力较弱。职责不明确和重要性感知低是导致不遵守P&T委员会政策和指南的最主要因素。