Helmons Pieter J, Suijkerbuijk Bas O, Nannan Panday Prashant V, Kosterink Jos G W
Department of Pharmacy, St Jansdal Hospital, Wethouder Jansenlaan 90, 3844 DG Harderwijk, the Netherlands
Department of Pharmacy, St Jansdal Hospital, Harderwijk, the Netherlands.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2015 Jul;22(4):764-72. doi: 10.1093/jamia/ocu010. Epub 2015 Feb 10.
Drug-drug interactions (DDIs) are very prevalent in hospitalized patients.
To determine the number of DDI alerts, time saved, and time invested after suppressing clinically irrelevant alerts and adding clinical-decision support to relevant alerts.
The most frequently occurring DDIs were evaluated for clinical relevance by a multidisciplinary expert panel. Pharmacist evaluation of relevant DDIs was facilitated using computerized decision support systems (CDSS). During Phase 1, only CDSS-assisted DDI checking was implemented. During Phase 2, CDSS-assisted DDI checking remained in place, and clinically irrelevant DDIs were suppressed. In each phase, the number of alerts and duration of pharmacist DDI checking were compared to conventional DDI checking. In addition, the time invested to implement and configure the CDSS was compared to the time saved using CDSS-assisted DDI checking.
CDSS-assisted DDI checking resulted in a daily decrease of DDI checking alerts from 65 to 47 alerts in Phase 1 (P = .03) and from 73 to 33 alerts in Phase 2 (P = .003). DDI checking duration decreased from 15 to 11 minutes (P = .044) and from 15½ to 8½ minutes (P = .001) in Phases 1 and 2, respectively. Almost 298 of the 392 hours required for implementation were invested by pharmacists. An annual timesaving of 30 hours yielded a return on investment of 9.8 years.
CDSS-assisted DDI checking resulted in a 55% reduction of the number of alerts and a 45% reduction in time spent on DDI checking, yielding a return on investment of almost 10 years. Our approach can be used to refine other drug safety checking modules, increasing the efficiency of checking for drug safety without the need to add more staff pharmacists.
药物相互作用(DDIs)在住院患者中非常普遍。
确定在抑制临床无关警报并为相关警报添加临床决策支持后,药物相互作用警报的数量、节省的时间和投入的时间。
由多学科专家小组评估最常见的药物相互作用的临床相关性。使用计算机化决策支持系统(CDSS)促进药剂师对相关药物相互作用的评估。在第1阶段,仅实施了CDSS辅助的药物相互作用检查。在第2阶段,CDSS辅助的药物相互作用检查仍然保留,并且抑制了临床无关的药物相互作用。在每个阶段,将警报数量和药剂师进行药物相互作用检查的持续时间与传统的药物相互作用检查进行比较。此外,将实施和配置CDSS投入的时间与使用CDSS辅助的药物相互作用检查节省的时间进行比较。
CDSS辅助的药物相互作用检查导致第1阶段药物相互作用检查警报每日从65条减少到47条(P = 0.03),第2阶段从73条减少到33条(P = 0.003)。第1阶段和第2阶段的药物相互作用检查持续时间分别从15分钟减少到11分钟(P = 0.044)和从15.5分钟减少到8.5分钟(P = 0.001)。实施所需的392小时中,约298小时由药剂师投入。每年节省30小时,投资回报率为9.8年。
CDSS辅助的药物相互作用检查使警报数量减少了55%,药物相互作用检查所花费的时间减少了45%,投资回报率近10年。我们的方法可用于完善其他药物安全检查模块,提高药物安全检查效率,而无需增加更多药剂师工作人员。