Evans Adam S, Lazar Eliot J, Tiase Victoria L, Fleischut Peter, Bostwick Susan B, Hripcsak George, Liebowitz Richard, Forese Laura L, Kerr Gregory
New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Am J Med Qual. 2011 Jan-Feb;26(1):39-42. doi: 10.1177/1062860610370712. Epub 2010 May 25.
Since 2006, the Joint Commission has required all hospitals to have a process in place for medication reconciliation (MR). Although it has been shown that MR decreases medical errors, achieving compliance has proven difficult for many health care institutions. This article describes a housestaff-championed intervention of a "hard stop" for on-admission MR orders that led to a statistically significant increase in compliance that was sustained at 6 months after intervention. Academic medical centers, which comprise large numbers of housestaff, can improve compliance with on-admission MR by engaging housestaff in the development of solutions and in communication to their peers, leading to sustained results.