Lathrop Korby, Lund Jim, Ludwig Brad, Rough Steve
Korby Lathrop, M.S., Pharm.D., is Pharmacy Manager, Informatics and Automation, University of Kansas Hospital, Kansas City. Jim Lund, M.S., Pharm.D., is Pharmacy Manager, Inpatient Operations; Brad Ludwig, M.S., B.S.Pharm., is Assistant Director of Pharmacy; and Steve Rough, M.S., B.S.Pharm., FASHP, is Director of Pharmacy, University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics, Madison.
Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2014 Jul 1;71(13):1112-9. doi: 10.2146/ajhp130411.
Efficiencies achieved through a redesign of the central pharmacy cartfill process at a large academic medical center are reported.
In an initiative to expand clinical pharmacy services in a budget-neutral manner, pharmacists at the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics (UWHC) led the transition from a once-daily to a thrice-daily medication cartfill model designed to better align pharmacy operations with patterns of medication ordering, delivery, and order discontinuation. A pre-post analysis demonstrated several benefits of the shift to thrice-daily cartfill, including a 32.7% decrease in the mean daily number of extemporaneously prepared oral doses. Overall, the new cartfill process resulted in reduction in lead times for three of four peak delivery periods, roughly a 55-65% reduction. During the postimplementation period, the frequency of requests for missing medication doses through the electronic medical record (EMR) system increased from 1.13% to 1.43%; however, this increase may have been the result of improved nurse adherence to EMR protocols for requests for missing medications.
Implementation of a thrice-daily cartfill process and ancillary changes at UWHC resulted in a 2.1% increase in cartfill doses dispensed, a 44.1% decrease in first doses dispensed, and a 42.9% decrease in the number of medications returned to the central pharmacy. This resulted in a reduction in waste within pharmacy operations and allowed for redeployment of two technician full-time equivalents to expand pharmacy services.