Wang Hongmei, Meng Long, Song Jie, Yang Jiadan, Li Juan, Qiu Feng
Department of Pharmacy, TheFirst Affiliated Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing, China.
Eur J Hosp Pharm. 2018 Sep;25(5):245-250. doi: 10.1136/ejhpharm-2017-001441. Epub 2018 Feb 8.
Medication reconciliation (MedRec) is recognised as a multiprofessional process for the prevention of medication discrepancies. The goal of this study is to evaluate the available electronic medication reconciliation (eMedRec) tools and their effect on unintended discrepancies that occur in hospital institutions.
PubMed, EMBASE, the Cochrane Library, Web of Science, the ClinicalTrials.gov website and four other Chinese databases were searched for relevant studies starting from their inception through October 2017. Methodological quality was assessed using the nine standard criteria of Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care Review Group (EPOC) and meta-analysis was performed using RevMan5.3 software.
A total of 13 studies (three randomised controlled trials and 10 non-randomised controlled trials) were identified. Meta-analysis results demonstrated a reduced number of medications with unintended discrepancies (relative risk (RR)=1.85, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.55 to 2.21), while no statistically significant differences were observed in the number of patients with unintended medication discrepancies (RR=2.74, 95% CI 0.59 to 12.73). Common discrepancies included medication omission, dose discrepancy, and frequency discrepancy. We found that the clinical impact of medication discrepancy was mild. A total of 12 electronic tools were reported and were mostly integrated into the hospital's information system. However, the usability, user adherence, and user satisfaction were found to lack sufficient evidence.
eMedRec was shown to reduce the incidence of medication with unintended discrepancies and improve medication safety. However, the electronic tools are diversified and the effects on other outcomes still require a comprehensive evaluation.
PROSPERO CRD42017067528.
用药核对(MedRec)被认为是一个多专业协作预防用药差异的过程。本研究的目的是评估现有的电子用药核对(eMedRec)工具及其对医院机构中发生的意外差异的影响。
检索了PubMed、EMBASE、Cochrane图书馆、科学网、ClinicalTrials.gov网站以及其他四个中文数据库,以查找从建库至2017年10月的相关研究。使用Cochrane有效实践与护理组织审查组(EPOC)的九条标准评估方法学质量,并使用RevMan5.3软件进行荟萃分析。
共纳入13项研究(3项随机对照试验和10项非随机对照试验)。荟萃分析结果显示,意外差异的用药数量减少(相对危险度(RR)=1.85,95%置信区间(CI)为1.55至2.21),而意外用药差异患者的数量未观察到统计学显著差异(RR=2.74,95%CI为0.59至12.73)。常见差异包括用药遗漏、剂量差异和频次差异。我们发现用药差异的临床影响较轻。共报告了12种电子工具,且大多已集成到医院信息系统中。然而,其可用性、用户依从性和用户满意度缺乏充分证据。
eMedRec可降低意外差异用药的发生率并提高用药安全性。然而,电子工具种类多样,对其他结果的影响仍需综合评估。
PROSPERO CRD42017067528。