Lang Ariella, Macdonald Marilyn, Marck Patricia, Toon Lynn, Griffin Melissa, Easty Tony, Fraser Kimberly, MacKinnon Neil, Mitchell Jonathan, Lang Eddy, Goodwin Sharon
Victorian Order of Nurses (VON Canada), Ottawa, ON, Canada.
Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova, Scotia, Canada.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2015 Dec 12;15:548. doi: 10.1186/s12913-015-1193-5.
Patient safety is a national and international priority with medication safety earmarked as both a prevalent and high-risk area of concern. To date, medication safety research has focused overwhelmingly on institutional based care provided by paid healthcare professionals, which often has little applicability to the home care setting. This critical gap in our current understanding of medication safety in the home care sector is particularly evident with the elderly who often manage more than one chronic illness and a complex palette of medications, along with other care needs. This study addresses the medication management issues faced by seniors with chronic illnesses, their family, caregivers, and paid providers within Canadian publicly funded home care programs in Alberta (AB), Ontario (ON), Quebec (QC) and Nova Scotia (NS).
Informed by a socio-ecological perspective, this study utilized Interpretive Description (ID) methodology and participatory photographic methods to capture and analyze a range of visual and textual data. Three successive phases of data collection and analysis were conducted in a concurrent, iterative fashion in eight urban and/or rural households in each province. A total of 94 participants (i.e., seniors receiving home care services, their family/caregivers, and paid providers) were interviewed individually. In addition, 69 providers took part in focus groups. Analysis was iterative and concurrent with data collection in that each interview was compared with subsequent interviews for converging as well as diverging patterns.
Six patterns were identified that provide a rich portrayal of the complexity of medication management safety in home care: vulnerabilities that impact the safe management and storage of medication, sustaining adequate supports, degrees of shared accountability for care, systems of variable effectiveness, poly-literacy required to navigate the system, and systemic challenges to maintaining medication safety in the home.
There is a need for policy makers, health system leaders, care providers, researchers, and educators to work with home care clients and caregivers on three key messages for improvement: adapt care delivery models to the home care landscape; develop a palette of user-centered tools to support medication safety in the home; and strengthen health systems integration.
患者安全是国家和国际层面的优先事项,药物安全被视为一个普遍且高风险的关注领域。迄今为止,药物安全研究主要集中在由付费医疗保健专业人员提供的机构护理上,而这通常对家庭护理环境适用性不大。我们目前对家庭护理领域药物安全理解上的这一关键差距,在老年人中尤为明显,他们往往患有不止一种慢性病,服用复杂的药物组合,同时还有其他护理需求。本研究探讨了加拿大艾伯塔省(AB)、安大略省(ON)、魁北克省(QC)和新斯科舍省(NS)公共资助家庭护理项目中患有慢性病的老年人及其家人、护理人员和付费服务提供者所面临的药物管理问题。
本研究以社会生态视角为指导,采用解释性描述(ID)方法和参与式摄影方法来收集和分析一系列视觉和文本数据。在每个省份的八个城市和/或农村家庭中,以并行、迭代的方式进行了三个连续阶段的数据收集和分析。总共94名参与者(即接受家庭护理服务的老年人、他们的家人/护理人员和付费服务提供者)接受了单独访谈。此外,69名服务提供者参加了焦点小组。分析是迭代的且与数据收集同步进行,即每次访谈都与后续访谈进行比较,以找出趋同和不同的模式。
确定了六种模式,这些模式丰富地描绘了家庭护理中药物管理安全的复杂性:影响药物安全管理和储存的脆弱性、维持足够的支持、护理的共同责任程度、效果各异的系统、应对该系统所需的多元读写能力,以及在家中维持药物安全的系统性挑战。
政策制定者、卫生系统领导者、护理提供者、研究人员和教育工作者需要与家庭护理客户和护理人员合作,传达三个关键的改进信息:使护理提供模式适应家庭护理环境;开发一系列以用户为中心的工具来支持家庭中的药物安全;加强卫生系统整合。