| Literature DB >> 34402022 |
Claudia Langebrake1,2, Carina Hohmann3, Susanne Lezius4, Michael Lueb5, Gesine Picksak6, Wencke Walter7, Sandra Kaden7, Heike Hilgarth8,9, Angela Ihbe-Heffinger10, Katja Leichenberg11.
Abstract
Background Pharmacists' interventions (PI) are suitable to improve medication safety and optimise patient outcome. However, in Germany, clinical pharmacy services are not yet available nationwide. Aim To gain prospective data on the extent and the composition of routine PI with special focus on intervention rates among German hospital pharmacists during two intervention weeks. Methods Within a repetitive cross-sectional study, clinical pharmacists documented all PIs on five days during a one-month period (intervention week) in 2017 and 2019 using the validated online-database ADKA-DokuPIK. Additionally, data regarding the supply structure/level of medical care, the extent of clinical pharmacy services and their professional experience were collected. All data were anonymised before analysis. Results In total, 2,282 PI from 62 pharmacists (2017) and 2578 PI from 52 pharmacists (2019) were entered. Intervention rate increased from 27.5 PI/100 patient days in 2017 to 38.5 PI/100 patient days in 2019 (p = 0.0097). Frequency of clinical pharmacy services on a daily basis significantly increased from 60% (2017) to 83% (2019). Reasons for PIs from the categories "drugs" (e.g. indication, choice, documentation/transcription) and "dose" were most common in both intervention weeks. The vast majority of underlying medication errors in both intervention weeks were categorised as "error, no harm" (80.3 vs. 78.6%), while the proportion of errors which did not reach the patient, doubled to 39.8% in IW-2019. Conclusion Regular and daily clinical pharmacy services become more established in Germany and clinical pharmacists are increasingly involved in solving drug related problems proactively and early during the medication management process.Entities:
Keywords: Drug related problem; Medication errors; Medication therapy management; Pharmacists’ interventions; Pharmacy service, hospital
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34402022 PMCID: PMC8866273 DOI: 10.1007/s11096-021-01313-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Clin Pharm
Characteristics of participants
| IW-2017 (n = 62) | IW-2019 (n = 52) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.463 | |||
| University hospital | 34 (54.9%) | 35 (67.3%) | |
| Maximum care hospitals | 11 (17.7%) | 7 (13.5%) | |
| Hospital of full medical care/specialist hospital | 8 (12.9%) | 3 (5.8%) | |
| General hospitals | 9 (14.5%) | 7 (13.5%) | |
| Hospital pharmacist | 9 (1.5–35) | 9.5 (0.5–32) | 0.984 |
| Expert clinical pharmacist according to further training regulations | 3 (0–30) | 1.5 (0–25) | 0.241 |
| Clinical pharmaceutical services | 6 (0.5–34) | 6 (1–19) | 0.451 |
| 0.022 | |||
| Daily | 37 (59.7%) | 43 (82.7%) | |
| 2–3-times per week | 14 (22.6%) | 2 (3.8%) | |
| Once weekly | 10 (16.1%) | 6 (11.5%) | |
| Less than once weekly | 1 (1.6%) | 1 (1.9%) | |
| 97 (40–211; 4–1000) | 85 (30–158; 2–1500) | 0.444 | |
| 0.499 | |||
| Daily | 2 (3.2%) | 3 (5.8%) | |
| 2–3 times per week | 8 (12.9%) | 4 (7.7%) | |
| Once weekly | 8 (12.9%) | 6 (11.5%) | |
| Less than once weekly | 14 (22.6%) | 7 (13.5%) | |
| In the context of projects | 30 (48.4%) | 32 (61.5%) |
Patient days are defined as the sum of all patients seen by the CP during a period of five working days
IQR inter-quartile range
Fig. 1Intervention rates, expressed as PI per 100 patient days in IW-2017 and IW-2019 (boxes represent the 25th to 75th percentiles, whiskers: lowest and highest non-extrem values, circles: mild outliers, asterixes: extreme outliers)
Reasons for PI in IW-2017 and IW-2019
| Code | Reason for PI | IW-2017 (n = 2282) | IW-2019 (n = 2578) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADM 1 | Request/query concerning administration/compatibility | 19 | 0.83% | 21 | 0.81% | 0.945 |
| ADM 2 | Administration (route) | 38 | 1.67% | 34 | 1.32% | 0.319 |
| ADM 3 | Administration (duration) | 14 | 0.61% | 25 | 0.97% | 0.165 |
| ADM 4 | Incompatibility or incorrect preparation or reconstitution | 2 | 0.09% | 5 | 0.19% | 0.329 |
| 0.512 | ||||||
| D 1 | Failure to adjust dose for organ dysfunction | 113 | 4.95% | 181 | 7.02% | |
| D 2 | (Inappropriate) dose | 268 | 11.74% | 249 | 9.66% | |
| D 3 | (Inappropriate) administration interval | 120 | 5.26% | 157 | 6.09% | 0.212 |
| D 4 | TDM not performed or not considered | 94 | 4.12% | 124 | 4.81% | 0.246 |
| DR 1 | (Clear) indication not (or no longer) given | 291 | 12.75% | 271 | 10.51% | |
| DR 2 | (Clear) indication, but no drug prescribed | 202 | 8.85% | 379 | 14.70% | |
| DR 3 | Drug allergy or medical history not considered | 26 | 1.14% | 9 | 0.35% | |
| DR 4 | Double prescription | 82 | 3.59% | 74 | 2.87% | 0.154 |
| DR 5 | Dispensing error on the ward | 0 | 0.00% | 4 | 0.16% | 0.060 |
| DR 6 | Generic/therapeutic substitution | 92 | 4.03% | 57 | 2.21% | |
| DR 7 | Transcription error | 137 | 6.00% | 43 | 1.67% | |
| DR 8 | Inappropriate or not most suitable drug formulation in terms of indication | 35 | 1.53% | 111 | 4.31% | |
| DR 9 | Inappropriately or not most suitable drug in terms of costs | 14 | 0.61% | 8 | 0.31% | 0.116 |
| DR 10 | Inappropriate or not most suitable drug in terms of indication | 94 | 4.12% | 145 | 5.62% | |
| DR 11 | Prescription/documentation incomplete/incorrect | 279 | 12.23% | 133 | 5.16% | |
| | ||||||
| O 1 | Advisory service/drug choice | 153 | 6.70% | 112 | 4.34% | |
| O 2 | Advisory service/drug dose | 161 | 7.06% | 94 | 3.65% | |
| O 3 | Procurement/costs | 32 | 1.40% | 114 | 4.42% | |
| O 4 | Failure to discontinue relevant drugs pre-/perioperatively | 10 | 0.44% | 15 | 0.58% | 0.485 |
| O 5 | Patient counselling or education | 12 | 0.53% | 8 | 0.31% | 0.241 |
Bold values in last column reflects statistically significant values
ADM administration, ADR adverse drug reaction, D dose, DR drug, I interaction, O other). As multiple choices of reasons per PI were possible, the sum of reasons is higher than the number of PI. Percentages are calculated on the number of PI
Fig. 2Classification of medication errors according to NCC-MERP. (A: no error, B: an error occurred but the error did not reach the patient, C: an error occurred that reached the patient, but did not cause patient harm, D: an error occurred that reached the patient and required monitoring to confirm that it resulted in no harm to the patient and/or required intervention to preclude harm, E: an error occurred that may have contributed to or resulted in temporary harm to the patient and required intervention, F: An error occurred that may have contributed to or resulted in temporary harm to the patient and required initial or prolonged hospitalization, G An error occurred that may have contributed to or resulted in permanent patient harm, H An error occurred that required intervention necessary to sustain life, I:an error occurred that may have contributed to or resulted in the patient’s death)
Acceptance of PI (PI in which only information was provided to either physicians or nurses (10.7 and 8.1%, respectively) were not included)
| IW-2017 (%) | IW-2019 (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention proposed and implemented | 1628 | 79.9 | 2096 | 88.4 |
| Intervention proposed, not implemented (proposal rejection) | 21 | 1.0 | 28 | 1.2 |
| Intervention proposed, not implemented (risk–benefit assessment) | 72 | 3.5 | 88 | 3.7 |
| Intervention proposed, outcome not known | 303 | 14.9 | 146 | 6.2 |
| Problem not solved | 14 | 0.7 | 12 | 0.5 |