S E Andersen1. 1. H:S Bispebjerg Hospital, Section of Clinical Pharmacology, H:S Amager Hospital, Centre of Internal Medicine, Copenhagen, Denmark. sean@rh.dk
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To identify organisational difficulties faced by physicians and nurses when using drug prescribing sheets for recording both drug prescriptions and drug administration. DESIGN: Qualitative interview study. SETTING: Two general internal medicine wards. PARTICIPANTS: Seven physicians and eight nurses. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Difficulties explicitly identified by the participants during the interviews. RESULTS: The implementation of procedures conflicted with existing structure, culture, and routines. Insufficient competence within the system to use the drug prescribing sheets created resistance and made people down the line create their own interpretations and solutions to the problems they faced. A total of nine problems were identified: (1) insufficient knowledge and uncertainty about procedures, (2) ignorance of sources of error, (3) unclear responsibilities, (4) low community spirit, (5) insufficient communication, (6) clinician autonomy and low acceptance of change, (7) strong professional identity, (8) low priority task, and (9) logistical problems. CONCLUSIONS: Unawareness of procedures, insufficient dissemination of knowledge, and insufficient cooperation and skepticism among those who put drug handling into practice is likely to have an impact on the quality of health care. The identification of these obstacles may help managers to improve the quality of the drug handling process on internal medicine wards and make it possible to select a framework for changing the clinical behaviour of doctors and nurses.
OBJECTIVES: To identify organisational difficulties faced by physicians and nurses when using drug prescribing sheets for recording both drug prescriptions and drug administration. DESIGN: Qualitative interview study. SETTING: Two general internal medicine wards. PARTICIPANTS: Seven physicians and eight nurses. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Difficulties explicitly identified by the participants during the interviews. RESULTS: The implementation of procedures conflicted with existing structure, culture, and routines. Insufficient competence within the system to use the drug prescribing sheets created resistance and made people down the line create their own interpretations and solutions to the problems they faced. A total of nine problems were identified: (1) insufficient knowledge and uncertainty about procedures, (2) ignorance of sources of error, (3) unclear responsibilities, (4) low community spirit, (5) insufficient communication, (6) clinician autonomy and low acceptance of change, (7) strong professional identity, (8) low priority task, and (9) logistical problems. CONCLUSIONS: Unawareness of procedures, insufficient dissemination of knowledge, and insufficient cooperation and skepticism among those who put drug handling into practice is likely to have an impact on the quality of health care. The identification of these obstacles may help managers to improve the quality of the drug handling process on internal medicine wards and make it possible to select a framework for changing the clinical behaviour of doctors and nurses.
Authors: Abha Agrawal; Jeffrey K Aronson; Nicky Britten; Robin E Ferner; Peter A de Smet; Daniela Fialová; Richard J Fitzgerald; Robert Likić; Simon R Maxwell; Ronald H Meyboom; Pietro Minuz; Graziano Onder; Michael Schachter; Giampaolo Velo Journal: Br J Clin Pharmacol Date: 2009-06 Impact factor: 4.335
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