The University of Iowa College of Pharmacy, Pharmacy Practice and Science Department, Iowa City, IA.
The University of Iowa College of Pharmacy, Pharmacy Practice and Science Department, Iowa City, IA.
J Am Med Dir Assoc. 2017 Jun 1;18(6):470-488. doi: 10.1016/j.jamda.2016.12.069. Epub 2017 Feb 24.
The objectives of this review were to identify the work system factors influencing medication safety measures [adverse drug events (ADEs), adverse drug reactions, or medication errors (MEs)], to determine the incidence of ADEs, and describe the most common ADEs in nursing homes (NHs).
A comprehensive literature review was conducted using PubMed and CINAHL to identify studies investigating factors that influence ADEs, adverse drug reactions, and MEs in NHs and skilled nursing facilities. An initial search identified related studies over 3 decades (1985-2016). Studies were classified according to Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety model factors.
Sixty studies were included in this review, which identifies 5 categories of work system factors affecting medication safety in NHs: persons (resident and staff), organization, tools and technology, tasks, and environment. The personal characteristics of NH residents included age, number and types of scheduled medications, and number and types of comorbidities. In addition, inadequate nursing staff medication knowledge and training are usually associated with administration MEs. Organizational factors include interprofessional collaboration, physician and pharmacist accessibility, and staff/resident ratio. A high staff number plays an essential role in preventing MEs and fracture incidents. The technology (barcode medication system) and tools (ME-reporting systems, ADE trigger tool, and potentially inappropriate medication criteria) can enhance the detection of MEs and ADEs. Workload and time pressure negatively impact NH staff task performance. Use of an ADE trigger tool by healthcare providers enhanced the ability to identify ADEs more than 50-fold over 6 months. Several environmental characteristics such as staff distraction and interruption negatively influence medication safety in NHs. The incidence rates of ADEs in NHs ranged from 1.89 to 10.8 per 100 resident-months. The most common ADEs were bleeding, thromboembolic events, hypoglycemia, falls, and constipation.
The Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety model is a useful framework for investigating the factors contributing to ADEs. Multiple work-system factors affect the medication safety of NH residents. A comprehensive study is needed to quantify the influence of various work-system factors on ADEs in NHs.
本综述的目的是确定影响药物安全措施(药物不良事件[ADE]、药物不良反应或用药错误[ME])的工作系统因素,确定 ADE 的发生率,并描述疗养院(NH)中最常见的 ADE。
使用 PubMed 和 CINAHL 进行全面的文献综述,以确定研究 NH 和熟练护理设施中影响 ADE、药物不良反应和 ME 的因素的研究。最初的搜索确定了过去 30 多年(1985-2016 年)的相关研究。根据患者安全系统工程倡议模型因素对研究进行分类。
本综述共纳入 60 项研究,确定了影响 NH 药物安全的 5 类工作系统因素:人员(居民和工作人员)、组织、工具和技术、任务和环境。NH 居民的个人特征包括年龄、计划用药的数量和类型以及合并症的数量和类型。此外,护理人员药物知识和培训不足通常与给药 ME 有关。组织因素包括跨专业协作、医生和药剂师的可及性以及员工/居民比例。高员工人数在预防 ME 和骨折事件中起着至关重要的作用。技术(条形码药物系统)和工具(ME 报告系统、ADE 触发工具和潜在不适当药物标准)可以提高 ME 和 ADE 的检测能力。工作量和时间压力对 NH 工作人员的任务表现产生负面影响。在 6 个月内,医疗保健提供者使用 ADE 触发工具可将 ADE 的识别能力提高 50 多倍。工作人员分心和中断等一些环境特征会对 NH 药物安全产生负面影响。NH 中 ADE 的发生率为每 100 居民-月 1.89 至 10.8 例。最常见的 ADE 是出血、血栓栓塞事件、低血糖、跌倒和便秘。
患者安全系统工程倡议模型是研究导致 ADE 的因素的有用框架。多个工作系统因素影响 NH 居民的药物安全。需要进行全面研究来量化各种工作系统因素对 NH 中 ADE 的影响。