Marianne Lea1, Ingeborg Barstad2,3, Liv Mathiesen4, Morten Mowe5,6, Espen Molden3,7. 1. Department of Pharmaceutical Services, Oslo Hospital Pharmacy, Kirkeveien 166, 0450, Oslo, Norway. marianne.lea@sykehusapotekene.no. 2. Department of Pharmaceutical Services, Oslo Hospital Pharmacy, Kirkeveien 166, 0450, Oslo, Norway. 3. Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, School of Pharmacy, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. 4. Hospital Pharmacies Enterprise, South Eastern Norway, Oslo, Norway. 5. General Internal Medicine Ward, The Medical Clinic, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway. 6. Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway. 7. Center for Psychopharmacology, Diakonhjemmet Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medication discrepancies at hospital admission is an extensive problem and knowledge is limited regarding improvement strategies. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effect of teaching and checklist implementation on accuracy of medication history recording during hospitalization. METHOD: Patients admitted to an internal medicine ward were prospectively included in two consecutive periods. Between the periods, non-mandatory teaching lessons were provided and a checklist assisting medication history recording implemented. Discrepancies between the recorded medications at admission and the patient's actual drug use, as revealed by pharmacist-conducted medication reconciliation, were compared between the periods. The primary endpoint was difference between the periods in proportion of patients with minimum one discrepancy. Difference in median number of discrepancies was included as a secondary endpoint. RESULTS: 56 and 119 patients were included in period 1 (P1) and period 2 (P2), respectively. There was no significant difference in proportion of patients with minimum one discrepancy in P2 (68.9 %) versus P1 (76.8 %, p = 0.36), but a tendency of lower median number of discrepancies was observed in P2 than P1, i.e. 1 and 2, respectively (p = 0.087). CONCLUSION: More powerful strategies than non-mandatory teaching activities and checklist implementation are required to achieve sufficient improvements in medication history recording during hospitalization.
BACKGROUND: Medication discrepancies at hospital admission is an extensive problem and knowledge is limited regarding improvement strategies. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effect of teaching and checklist implementation on accuracy of medication history recording during hospitalization. METHOD:Patients admitted to an internal medicine ward were prospectively included in two consecutive periods. Between the periods, non-mandatory teaching lessons were provided and a checklist assisting medication history recording implemented. Discrepancies between the recorded medications at admission and the patient's actual drug use, as revealed by pharmacist-conducted medication reconciliation, were compared between the periods. The primary endpoint was difference between the periods in proportion of patients with minimum one discrepancy. Difference in median number of discrepancies was included as a secondary endpoint. RESULTS: 56 and 119 patients were included in period 1 (P1) and period 2 (P2), respectively. There was no significant difference in proportion of patients with minimum one discrepancy in P2 (68.9 %) versus P1 (76.8 %, p = 0.36), but a tendency of lower median number of discrepancies was observed in P2 than P1, i.e. 1 and 2, respectively (p = 0.087). CONCLUSION: More powerful strategies than non-mandatory teaching activities and checklist implementation are required to achieve sufficient improvements in medication history recording during hospitalization.
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