| Literature DB >> 30842883 |
Aziz Sheikh1, Igor Rudan1, Kathrin Cresswell1, Neelam Dhingra-Kumar2, Mei Lee Tan2, Minna L Häkkinen2, Liam Donaldson2,3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Medication errors continue to contribute substantially to global morbidity and mortality. In the context of the recent launch of the World Health Organization's (WHO) Third Global Patient Safety Challenge: Medication Without Harm, we sought to establish agreement on research priorities for medication safety.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30842883 PMCID: PMC6393844 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.09.010422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
The top 20 research priorities among the 333 proposed research questions based on the scores from 42 experts in medication safety*
| RANK ALL | RESEARCH QUESTION | ANSWERABLE | EFFECTIVE | INNOVATIVE | IMPLEMENTABLE | BURDEN REDUCED | EQUITABLE | RPS | AEA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| To assess how the incidence of harm due to prescribing errors can be reduced by different interventions in low- and middle-income countries. | 94 | 95 | 74 | 84 | 97 | 91 | 89.2 | 0.643 | |
| To assess the prevalence, main factors responsible and the effective interventions for preventing severe avoidable medication-related patient harm in resource-limited settings through pilot studies. | 90 | 92 | 76 | 85 | 90 | 88 | 86.8 | 0.575 | |
| To identify affordable and effective methods of improving medication literacy among patients in resource limited settings | 91 | 91 | 73 | 89 | 87 | 89 | 86.7 | 0.615 | |
| To develop a predictive algorithm to identify individuals who are at risk of serious medication-related harm. | 88 | 91 | 90 | 79 | 94 | 76 | 86.2 | 0.742 | |
| To investigate the role of health communication strategies to support patients with limited language proficiency, health literacy and education in taking medications safely. | 89 | 88 | 73 | 85 | 85 | 95 | 85.8 | 0.571 | |
| To assess the impact of increasing the amount of trained human resources to reduce medication errors in low- and middle-income countries | 91 | 87 | 79 | 80 | 90 | 81 | 84.6 | 0.599 | |
| To develop and validate a complexity score (c-score) to identify the patients who are at risk of readmission in 30 d due to medication errors which could be used by pharmacists and physicians | 91 | 85 | 79 | 90 | 88 | 72 | 84.3 | 0.631 | |
| To improve medication safety for in-patients, through the application of ergonomics and human factors in the organization of the medications flow: order, distribution, stocking, preparation and administration. | 92 | 86 | 76 | 86 | 89 | 75 | 83.9 | 0.575 | |
| To identify the most effective empowerment methods and tools for patients and their caregivers to speak up when they see the potential for medication-related harm, especially applicable to patients in LMICs, as often the most impacted individuals are poorer and less educated. | 85 | 79 | 84 | 79 | 82 | 94 | 83.6 | 0.595 | |
| To develop and validate a complexity score (c-score) for patients in need for de-prescribing which would help the physicians or pharmacists identify the high-risk patients who might develop drug-drug interactions. | 91 | 84 | 80 | 86 | 84 | 75 | 83.3 | 0.563 | |
| To identify and develop globally applicable pictograms for selected high-risk medications which would convey the critically important safety information | 87 | 82 | 72 | 83 | 88 | 87 | 83.1 | 0.536 | |
| To conduct a study investigating the types of medication-related harm that occur in transitions between hospitals and primary care settings in LMIC. | 97 | 86 | 63 | 83 | 89 | 80 | 82.8 | 0.571 | |
| To create patient knowledge-building tools for medication safety with critical thinking to ensure they are usable for people with low level of literacy, in a reliable format and addressing the role of internet as an information source. | 88 | 83 | 80 | 81 | 78 | 86 | 82.6 | 0.623 | |
| To investigate how technologies could be appropriately implemented and scaled in LMICs to better ensure that drugs are not spoiled, diverted, counterfeited, and that supply chain performance is optimized to avoid stock outs and drug shortages. | 83 | 90 | 70 | 83 | 84 | 82 | 82.0 | 0.452 | |
| To compare the benefits of pictorial information in medication instructions to written instructions alone, in improving medication safety. To what extent, in what contexts and formats is pictorial information most beneficial? | 88 | 78 | 80 | 80 | 76 | 83 | 81.0 | 0.500 | |
| To identify what national strategies and/or policies for medication safety across high-, middle-, and low-income countries exist. What gaps remain in identifying and implementing these prevention strategies/policies? | 95 | 84 | 63 | 75 | 82 | 85 | 80.8 | 0.540 | |
| To evaluate the impact of medication reconciliation in preventing medication errors in low-income countries. | 94 | 85 | 63 | 73 | 85 | 83 | 80.6 | 0.563 | |
| To identify indicators of medication safety that have been utilised in low-resource settings. What is known about their validity, reliability, and feasibility, and what potential indicators should be introduced? | 93 | 80 | 69 | 83 | 78 | 80 | 80.6 | 0.508 | |
| To investigate how to ensure patient safety for patients utilizing oral home-based chemotherapy administration: maximising patient education and monitoring systems. | 91 | 85 | 76 | 86 | 77 | 69 | 80.6 | 0.548 | |
| To identify the reliable easily measured indicators to assess medication safety both at a facility level and at national level | 88 | 83 | 67 | 86 | 80 | 73 | 79.6 | 0.540 |
RPS – research priority score, AEA – average expert agreement
*Specific scores, ranging from 0-100, are presented for each of the 6 priority-setting criteria: answerability, effectiveness, innovativeness, implementability, potential for burden reduction and equitability. Questions are ranked according to their overall research priority scores (RPS), which also has a maximum theoretical range of 0%-100%. Average expert agreement, which can theoretically range from 25%-100%, is also provided for each question.
Top 10 research priorities among the 333 proposed research questions based on the scores from 27 experts in medication safety who were scoring mainly with a high-resource context in mind, and who represent a subset of the 42 scorers*
| RANK HIC | RESEARCH QUESTION | ANSWERABLE | EFFECTIVE | INNOVATIVE | IMPLEMENTABLE | BURDEN REDUCED | EQUITABLE | RPS | AEA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | To compare the benefits of pictorial information in medication instructions to written instructions alone, in improving medication safety. To what extent, in what contexts and formats is pictorial information most beneficial? | 97 | 84 | 91 | 87 | 81 | 95 | 89.1 | 0.580 |
| 2 | To identify and develop globally applicable pictograms for selected high-risk medications which would convey the critically important safety information | 93 | 88 | 80 | 89 | 94 | 90 | 89.0 | 0.599 |
| 3 | To investigate how technologies could be appropriately implemented and scaled in LMICs to better ensure that drugs are not spoiled, diverted, counterfeited, and that supply chain performance is optimized to avoid stock outs and drug shortages. | 91 | 100 | 77 | 88 | 90 | 87 | 88.7 | 0.500 |
| 4 | To assess how the incidence of harm due to prescribing errors can be reduced by different interventions in low- and middle-income countries. | 95 | 97 | 71 | 75 | 100 | 87 | 87.4 | 0.568 |
| 5 | To investigate the role of health communication strategies to support patients with limited language proficiency, health literacy and education in taking medications safely. | 90 | 86 | 71 | 85 | 83 | 100 | 85.9 | 0.599 |
| 6 | To develop a predictive algorithm to identify individuals who are at risk of serious medication-related harm. | 82 | 92 | 86 | 74 | 96 | 78 | 84.7 | 0.722 |
| 7 | To identify affordable and effective methods of improving medication literacy among patients in resource limited settings | 89 | 84 | 79 | 87 | 83 | 84 | 84.6 | 0.549 |
| 8 | To identify and create recommendations for the most effective approach to decision support alerts in electronic prescribing systems, the optimum sensitivity and specificity and criteria which should be used to enable prescriber to receive alerts but not receive alert fatigue. | 96 | 89 | 74 | 91 | 89 | 68 | 84.6 | 0.667 |
| 9 | To create patient knowledge-building tools for medication safety with critical thinking to ensure they are usable for people with low level of literacy, in a reliable format and addressing the role of internet as an information source. | 89 | 82 | 77 | 80 | 79 | 96 | 83.7 | 0.617 |
| 10 | To develop and validate a complexity score (c-score) for patients in need for de-prescribing which would help the physicians or pharmacists identify the high-risk patients who might develop drug-drug interactions. | 93 | 81 | 76 | 88 | 86 | 79 | 83.7 | 0.580 |
RPS – research priority score, AEA – average expert agreement
*Specific scores, ranging from 0-100, are presented for each of the 6 priority-setting criteria: answerability, effectiveness, innovativeness, implementability, potential for burden reduction and equitability. Questions are ranked according to their overall research priority scores (RPS), which also has a maximum theoretical range of 0%-100%. Average expert agreement, which can theoretically range from 25%-100%, is also provided for each question.
Top 10 research priorities among the 333 proposed research questions based on the scores from 10 experts in medication safety who were scoring mainly with a low-resource context in mind, and who represent a subset of the 42 scorers*
| RANK LMICs | RESEARCH QUESTION | ANSWERABLE | EFFECTIVE | INNOVATIVE | IMPLEMENTABLE | BURDEN REDUCED | EQUITABLE | RPS | AEA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | To assess and identify the weak links in the medication safety process chain to consolidate the local systems and resolve the occurring difficulties and differences in practice. | 88 | 100 | 94 | 94 | 94 | 100 | 94.8 | 0.733 |
| 2 | To assess the prevalence, main factors responsible and the effective interventions for preventing severe avoidable medication-related patient harm in resource-limited settings through pilot studies. | 94 | 94 | 100 | 89 | 94 | 94 | 94.3 | 0.750 |
| 3 | To investigate the impact of addressing high alert medications on morbidity and mortality in two pilot sites, one in LMIC and one HIC. | 100 | 100 | 88 | 94 | 89 | 89 | 93.3 | 0.800 |
| 4 | To identify what national strategies and/or policies for medication safety across high-, middle-, and low-income countries exist. What gaps remain in identifying and implementing these prevention strategies/policies? | 94 | 100 | 75 | 94 | 100 | 94 | 92.7 | 0.717 |
| 5 | To identify the most effective empowerment methods and tools for patients and their caregivers to speak up when they see the potential for medication-related harm, especially applicable to patients in LMICs, as often the most impacted individuals are poorer and less educated. | 89 | 90 | 90 | 95 | 94 | 95 | 92.2 | 0.833 |
| 6 | What are the most frequent causes of severe, avoidable medication-related harm in high-, middle-, and low-income countries? If this is not known, what steps need to be taken to build and/or strengthen surveillance systems to identify medication-related harm? | 94 | 100 | 75 | 94 | 94 | 94 | 92.0 | 0.750 |
| 7 | To identify and create new indicators and metrics for medication safety to measure better the impact of medication safety work. | 93 | 93 | 93 | 93 | 93 | 86 | 91.7 | 0.583 |
| 8 | To assess the reporting and learning of medication error systems at global and regional level and their impact on system change | 94 | 89 | 81 | 94 | 89 | 100 | 91.2 | 0.750 |
| 9 | To evaluate the prevalence of unnecessary medications and food supplements, drug-drug interactions and drug-disease interactions among patients who take multiple medications. | 94 | 100 | 69 | 94 | 94 | 94 | 91.1 | 0.767 |
| 10 | To investigate the correlations between patient education and engagement with adherence to medication, inappropriate prescriptions and adverse drug events; and to identify which education tools are effective and sustainable. | 94 | 95 | 80 | 100 | 95 | 80 | 90.7 | 0.850 |
RPS – research priority score, AEA – average expert agreement
*Specific scores, ranging from 0-100, are presented for each of the 6 priority-setting criteria: answerability, effectiveness, innovativeness, implementability, potential for burden reduction and equitability. Questions are ranked according to their overall research priority scores (RPS), which also has a maximum theoretical range of 0%-100%. Average expert agreement, which can theoretically range from 25%-100%, is also provided for each question.
The 10 most controversial research questions among the 333 proposed research questions based on the measure of average expert agreement, which has a maximum theoretical range of 25%-100%*
| RANK ALL | RESEARCH QUESTION | ANSWERABLE | EFFECTIVE | INNOVATIVE | IMPLEMENTABLE | BURDEN REDUCED | EQUITABLE | RPS | AEA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| To compare generic marking of every individual medication and dosage against existing medication in improving medication safety? | 60 | 48 | 45 | 45 | 40 | 43 | 46.9 | 0.230 | |
| To conduct research into the development of expert systems encompassing a wide scope of patient information (including age, gender, genetic makeup, laboratory tests), to aid as a clinical decision support. | 54 | 56 | 54 | 54 | 61 | 54 | 55.2 | 0.278 | |
| To perform an observational study to identify which laboratory tests can early diagnose a medication error. | 48 | 46 | 58 | 44 | 46 | 54 | 49.5 | 0.282 | |
| To develop and validate models focused on aspects of hospital layout and health care worker/patient flow to reduce HAIs | 73 | 54 | 55 | 66 | 64 | 52 | 60.6 | 0.282 | |
| To evaluate the efficacy of generic antibiotics compared to their original patented brand. Do they have the same impact on antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the digestive flora? | 64 | 44 | 44 | 46 | 46 | 46 | 48.5 | 0.282 | |
| To determine factors that drive spread of HAIs and investigate new approaches that minimize the role of the health care environment in the spread of germs | 68 | 58 | 39 | 56 | 50 | 44 | 52.5 | 0.282 | |
| To conduct an exploratory study on the conditions and regulations needed to adopt the prescription to OTC switch. | 52 | 32 | 38 | 43 | 27 | 43 | 39.4 | 0.282 | |
| To conduct a study exploring implementation methods of drug classification systems in LMIC. | 58 | 40 | 39 | 52 | 42 | 46 | 46.1 | 0.290 | |
| To assess the consequences to the individual's well-being and to their effectiveness when the workplace pursues complete elimination of avoidable harm. | 50 | 50 | 52 | 46 | 48 | 39 | 47.6 | 0.290 | |
| To conduct a study investigating the impact of procurement based on clinical efficacy and safety, with the use of longitudinal data analytics thereby optimising benefits and minimising harm. | 66 | 69 | 64 | 62 | 65 | 54 | 63.2 | 0.294 |
RPS – research priority score, AEA – average expert agreement
*The scores from 42 experts in medication safety contributed to this ranking. Overall ranks and scores (RPS) are also provided for each question.
The 20 lowest-ranked research questions among the 333 proposed research questions based on the scores from 42 experts in medication safety*
| RANK ALL | RESEARCH QUESTION | ANSWERABLE | EFFECTIVE | INNOVATIVE | IMPLEMENTABLE | BURDEN REDUCED | EQUITABLE | RPS | AEA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| To perform an observational study to identify which laboratory tests can early diagnose a medication error. | 48 | 46 | 58 | 44 | 46 | 54 | 49.5 | 0.282 | |
| To analyze and identify the root cause of multidrug resistance in the treatment process to create more effective interventions. | 58 | 50 | 34 | 53 | 53 | 47 | 49.4 | 0.353 | |
| To conduct a longitudinal observational study of patient medication non-adherence on health outcomes. | 72 | 50 | 34 | 51 | 43 | 43 | 49.0 | 0.452 | |
| To evaluate the efficacy of generic antibiotics compared to their original patented brand. Do they have the same impact on antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the digestive flora? | 64 | 44 | 44 | 46 | 46 | 46 | 48.5 | 0.282 | |
| To compare the efficacy of generic medication to the original index drug and all other generic forms? | 63 | 46 | 32 | 50 | 46 | 54 | 48.5 | 0.333 | |
| To assess the consequences to the individual's well-being and to their effectiveness when the workplace pursues complete elimination of avoidable harm. | 50 | 50 | 52 | 46 | 48 | 39 | 47.6 | 0.290 | |
| To develop Shared Care Guidelines for selected medicines, to promote safe continuity of care in the community. | 61 | 48 | 29 | 48 | 46 | 52 | 47.3 | 0.329 | |
| To compare generic marking of every individual medication and dosage against existing medication in improving medication safety? | 60 | 48 | 45 | 45 | 40 | 43 | 46.9 | 0.230 | |
| To conduct a study exploring implementation methods of drug classification systems in LMIC. | 58 | 40 | 39 | 52 | 42 | 46 | 46.1 | 0.290 | |
| To conduct a study investigating clinical situations that lie outside the guidelines, is there an increased incidence of unnecessary bridging with heparin or low molecular weight heparin? | 60 | 47 | 40 | 55 | 40 | 34 | 45.9 | 0.353 | |
| To develop clinical guidelines for rarely used drugs and perform audits on use. | 59 | 43 | 48 | 44 | 38 | 40 | 45.4 | 0.317 | |
| Assessing the benefits on patient safety and efficacy of marking expiration month and date on tablets. | 62 | 39 | 41 | 53 | 38 | 40 | 45.4 | 0.349 | |
| To conduct an experimental study investigating the differences in the length of carriage of resistant bacteria, after exposure to a single course of antibiotics. | 70 | 41 | 40 | 35 | 39 | 37 | 43.6 | 0.353 | |
| To develop digital thermometers for use with medicine fridges and freezers. | 66 | 42 | 23 | 59 | 30 | 40 | 43.2 | 0.413 | |
| To identify ways to ensure that the systemic problems (and failings) of medication safety amongst health care professionals will not conflict with the current trend of increasing patient knowledge and awareness. | 45 | 38 | 47 | 43 | 43 | 40 | 42.8 | 0.341 | |
| To investigate the effect on patient safety if medication is infused through central vs peripheral veins. | 58 | 42 | 26 | 52 | 44 | 27 | 41.4 | 0.433 | |
| To research into producing a medicines handbook that classifies medication by disease and patient group, that can be applied to different geographic country contexts. | 44 | 36 | 43 | 40 | 36 | 45 | 40.6 | 0.369 | |
| To conduct an exploratory study on the conditions and regulations needed to adopt the prescription to OTC switch. | 52 | 32 | 38 | 43 | 27 | 43 | 39.4 | 0.282 | |
| To create recommendations to accurately identify a patient which could be applied to different institutional contexts. | 50 | 42 | 27 | 48 | 38 | 25 | 38.2 | 0.329 | |
| To investigate the change in the status of the medication to create reliable processes. | 29 | 31 | 24 | 28 | 28 | 26 | 27.4 | 0.325 |
RPS – research priority score, AEA – average expert agreement
*Specific scores, ranging from 0-100, are presented for each of the 6 priority-setting criteria: answerability, effectiveness, innovativeness, implementability, potential for burden reduction and equitability. Questions are ranked according to their overall research priority scores (RPS), which also has a maximum theoretical range of 0%-100%. Average expert agreement, which can theoretically range from 25%-100%, is also provided for each question.
Figure 1Key priorities for low- and high-resource settings.