Mekonnen Alemayehu B, McLachlan Andrew J, Brien Jo-Anne E, Mekonnen Desalew, Abay Zenahebezu
Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
School of Pharmacy, University of Gondar, Gondar, Ethiopia.
BMJ Open. 2016 Nov 24;6(11):e012322. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012322.
Medication related adverse events are common, particularly during transitions of care, and have a significant impact on patient outcomes and healthcare costs. Medication reconciliation (MedRec) is an important initiative to achieve the Quality Use of Medicines, and has been adopted as a standard practice in many developed countries. However, the impact of this strategy is rarely described in Ethiopia. The aims of this study are to explore patient safety culture, and to develop, implement and evaluate a theory informed MedRec intervention, with the aim of minimising the incidence of medication errors during hospital admission.
The study will be conducted in a resource limited setting. There are three phases to this project. The first phase is a mixed methods study of healthcare professionals' perspectives of patient safety culture and patients' experiences of medication related adverse events. In this phase, the Hospital Survey on Patient Safety Culture will be used along with semi-structured indepth interviews to investigate patient safety culture and experiences of medication related adverse events. The second phase will use a semi-structured interview guide, designed according to the 12 domains of the Theoretical Domains Framework, to explore the barriers and facilitators to medication safety activities delivered by hospital pharmacists. The third phase will be a single centre, before and after study, that will evaluate the impact of pharmacist conducted admission MedRec in an emergency department (ED). The main outcome measure is the incidence and potential clinical severity of medication errors. We will then analyse the differences in the incidence and severity of medication errors before and after initiation of an ED pharmacy service.
与药物治疗相关的不良事件很常见,尤其是在医疗护理转接期间,并且对患者的治疗结果和医疗成本有重大影响。药物重整(MedRec)是实现合理用药的一项重要举措,在许多发达国家已被采用为标准做法。然而,在埃塞俄比亚,这种策略的影响鲜有描述。本研究的目的是探索患者安全文化,并制定、实施和评估一项基于理论的药物重整干预措施,以尽量减少住院期间用药错误的发生率。
本研究将在资源有限的环境中进行。该项目有三个阶段。第一阶段是一项混合方法研究,涉及医疗保健专业人员对患者安全文化的看法以及患者对与药物治疗相关不良事件的经历。在此阶段,将使用《患者安全文化医院调查》以及半结构化深度访谈来调查患者安全文化和与药物治疗相关不良事件的经历。第二阶段将使用根据理论领域框架的12个领域设计的半结构化访谈指南,以探索医院药剂师开展的用药安全活动的障碍和促进因素。第三阶段将是一项单中心的前后对照研究,将评估药剂师在急诊科(ED)进行入院药物重整的影响。主要结局指标是用药错误的发生率和潜在临床严重程度。然后,我们将分析开展急诊科药房服务前后用药错误发生率和严重程度的差异。