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Medication Safety at transitions of care

Medication Safety at transitions of care. Elizabeth Isaac, PharmD , BCPS PGY-2 Medication Use Safety Resident UMass Memorial Medical Center. Disclosures. I have no disclosures concerning possible financial or personal relationship with commercial entities. Objectives.

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Medication Safety at transitions of care

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  1. Medication Safety at transitions of care Elizabeth Isaac, PharmD, BCPS PGY-2 Medication Use Safety Resident UMass Memorial Medical Center

  2. Disclosures I have no disclosures concerning possible financial or personal relationship with commercial entities.

  3. Objectives • Review the types of transitions of care • Understand the risk factors for medication discrepancies at transitions of care • Identify the types of patients and medications most at risk for having a medication discrepancy during transitions of care • Develop strategies to prevent medication errors while transitioning care

  4. Patient Case • MB is 93 year old female who presented to the hospital on January 20thwith generalized weakness. • HPI: Pt was hospitalized in September 2013 for a pneumonia and recently completed a course of prednisone for COPD exacerbation. • PMH: CAD (3VD w/ bare metal stent, EF 60-65%), HTN, TIA, chronic rhinitis, dyslipidemia, GI bleed on clopidogrel, COPD, osteoarthritis, diverticulosis, pseudomonas pneumonia (on inhaled tobramycin)

  5. Patient Case: MB • Allergies (from Pharmacy system) • Bactrim, doxycycline, nitrofurantoin, penicillins • A medication reconciliation was conducted based on an interview with the patient

  6. Types of transitions1

  7. Types of transitions1

  8. Types of transitions1

  9. Types of transitions1

  10. Types of transitions1

  11. Types of transitions1

  12. Types of transitions1

  13. Types of transitions1

  14. Regulatory Standards2 • Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goal 03.06.01 • To the best of one’s ability with the resources available • Record and pass along correct information about a patient’s medications. Find out what the patient is taking and compare them to new medications given by the LIP. Provide patient’s with the most up-to-date list of their medications that they are taking and educate them to take the most up-to-date list to every appointment • Type of medication reconciliation can vary by health care setting

  15. The advent of the hospitalist3,4 • Increasing demands on outpatient providers have shifted the inpatient care of the patient to hospitalists • Currently estimated between 10,000 and 12,000 hospitalists are practicing in the United States • Expected to grow to 30,000 in the next decade according to the Society of Hospital Medicine

  16. Deficits in communication and information transfer between hospital-based and primary care physicians5

  17. Deficits in communication and information transfer between hospital-based and primary care physicians5

  18. Deficits in communication and information transfer between hospital-based and primary care physicians5

  19. Deficits in communication and information transfer between hospital-based and primary care physicians5 • Conclusions • Transmission of information between disciplines at discharge varies and is often inefficient and incomplete • Discharge summaries should be based on a standardized format • Effect on clinical outcomes was hard to measure

  20. The downside to the hospitalist • Primary care physicians are less involved in the care of the patient during hospitalization • Only taking care of the patient temporarily • Incomplete hospitalization records are often tied to medication discrepancies • Added burden to PCPs • Alert fatigue • Delay in test results or discharge paperwork

  21. Medication discrepancies during transitions of care: a comparison study6

  22. Medication discrepancies during transitions of care: a comparison study6

  23. Medication discrepancies during transitions of care: a comparison study6 • Overall, a greater number of medication discrepancies were identified on patients cared for by physicians without admitting privileges • Most common discrepancy was the omission of a medication • Patients were more likely to follow up with their PCP if they had admitting privileges • Age, gender, healthcare coverage, and follow-up time did not have an effect on the discrepancy occurrences

  24. Economic and financial influences of healthcare7 • Affordable Care Act, Condition code 44 (2004) • Allows a hospital utilization review committee to change a patient’s status from inpatient to outpatient if the original admission is deemed unnecessary prior to discharge • Contributing to the utilization of “observation” status • Observation stays within 30 days of hospital discharge per 1000 beneficiaries increased from 4.7 to 5.8 from 2009-2010 to 2012-2013

  25. Disjointed Care • Hospital-based vs. primary care physicians • Delay in information • “Observation” patients

  26. Medication discrepancies

  27. Medication Reconciliation8 • A three step process of verifying medication use, identifying variances, and rectifying medication errors at interfaces of care • Complete reconciliation should include a conversation with the patient and a review of pharmacy or patient records

  28. Barriers to accurate medication reconciliation • Patient health literacy • Comorbidities • Polypharmacy • Multiple providers • Frequent transitions • Reconciler • Closed formulary • Pediatric dosing

  29. High risk patients3 • Elderly • Patients with multiples medications and comorbidities • Patients with limited literacy skills • Patients who do not speak English • Pediatric patients

  30. High Risk Medications3 • Antithrombotics • Insulin and other hypoglycemics • Opiates • Antiarrhythmics and other cardiovascular medications • Chemotherapy • Immunosuppressants • Antiseizure medications • Eye Medications • Inhalers • BEERs Criteria medications in patients over 65 years of age

  31. Medication errors in adult and pediatric patients8,9

  32. Reconcilable differences: correcting medication errors at hospital admission and discharge8

  33. Medication discrepancies at Transitions in Pediatrics: A Review of the Literature9 • Discrepancies at admission • 22 – 72.3% with an unintended discrepancy • In the ED • Pre- pharmacist implementation – 71% • Post- pharmacist implementation – 38.3% • At transfer • 0.53 unintentional discrepancy per patient • At discharge • 43% of patients and 15% of medications

  34. Medication discrepancies at Transitions in Pediatrics: A Review of the Literature9 • Clinical impact of discrepancies • Estimated that up to 6% could lead to severe discomfort or clinical deterioration • 23% could have potential to cause, and 71% were unlikely • No specific discrepancies identified

  35. Medication errors in adult and pediatric patients8,9 • Adult study conclusions • Impact of pharmacist reconciliation may have been falsely low • Economic analysis was favorable to pharmacy involvement • Pediatric study conclusions • Medication reconciliation tools used in the adult population may not be applicable to the pediatric population • Small, widely varied, studies are inconclusive of the clinical impact medication discrepancies have on pediatrics • Limitations to both studies

  36. Medication discrepancies and their impact • Drug-drug interactions • Inappropriate medication use • Withdrawal from medications • Unintended consequences (seizures, thrombosis, tachycardia) • Over- or under- dose • Hospital readmission • Added health-care costs

  37. Patient case

  38. Patient Case

  39. Patient Case • A second medication reconciliation was conducted • Isosorbide and valsartan discontinued • Provider notes all indicated isosorbide and valsartan should be continued • Patient discharged on medications • Error later realized by daughter

  40. When medication reconciliation works10-12 • Several studies have looked at the impact of pharmacist or specialized nurse medication reconciliation and the impact on hospital readmission rates and economic outcomes • The 30 day readmission rate has been a major endpoint for most studies, but some have looked at 90 and 180 day readmissions

  41. When medication reconciliation works10-12 • Types of interventions • Implementation of a transition coach • Pharmacist reconciliation, counseling, and follow up • Overall, reduced readmission rates were seen with the high intensity interventions • Economically cost-neutral • Lower rates of preventable ADE’s

  42. When medication reconciliation works11

  43. Discharge Checklist13

  44. Pharmacist’s Role14 • Obtaining a comprehensive medication history using the three step process • Numerous studies have shown the benefit of involving a pharmacist across the continuum of care, especially in patients with multiple comorbidities and medications • Expanding role of the pharmacist is placing us in areas of health-care where we can take on a more active role in a patient’s medication management

  45. Pharmacist’s role14 • Inpatient pharmacy • Comprehensive medication reconciliation • Involved in discharge planning • Community and Ambulatory care • Use of MTM • Providing patients with up-to-date medication lists • Highlighting new medications for use • Long-term Care (LTCF) • Perform medication reconciliation within 5 days of readmittance to the LTCF • Monthly medication reconciliation to assure appropriate care

  46. Assessment • MB is the 93 year old woman admitted for generalized weakness. A medication reconciliation is obtained by interviewing the patient. Later, discrepancies were identified when speaking with the patient’s daughter which were subsequently rectified. Which stage of the medication reconciliation process was missed which led to an error in the patient’s care? a. Interview with the patient to obtain medication use b. Review of pharmacy, outpatient, or hospital records for medication use c. Identification of medication discrepancies d. Rectifying medication discrepancies

  47. Assessment • Which of the following is not a potential risk factor for medication discrepancies during transitions of care? a. Elderly patients b. Multiple comorbidities and polypharmacy c. Patients on oral antibiotics d. Multiple providers and disjointed care

  48. Questions?

  49. References • The Joint Commission. Transitions of care: the need for a more effective approach to continuing patient care. Hot Topics in Health Care. Jun 2012:1-8. • The Joint Commission. National Patient Safety Goals. Hospital Accreditation Program. Jan 2014:1-17. • Kripalani S, Jackson, AT, Schnipper JL, Coleman EA. Promoting effective transitions of care at hospital discharge: a review of key issues for hospitalists. Journal of Hospital Medicine. 2007;2:314-23. • Society of Hospital Medicine. SMH Faq List. 2014. Available at: https://www.hospitalmedicine.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=FAQs&Template=/FAQ/FAQListAll.cfm. Accessed on 23 April 2014. • Kripalani S, LeFavre F, Phillips CO, Williams MV, Basaviah P, Baker DW. Deficits in communication and information transfer between hospital-based and primary care physicians. JAMA. 2007;297:831-41. • Trompeter JM, McMillan AN, Rager ML, Fox JR. Medication discrepancies during transitions of care: a comparison study. Journal of Healthcare Quality. 2014;00:1-7. • Daughtridge GW, Archibald T, Conway PH. Quality improvement of care transitions and the trend of composite hospital care. JAMA. 2014;311:1013-14.

  50. References • Vira T, Colquhoun M, Etchells E. Reconcilable differences: correcting medication errors at hospital admission and discharge. QualSaf Health Care. 2006;15:122-26. • Huynh C etal. Medication discrepancies at transitions in pediatrics: a review of the literature. Pediatr Drugs. 2013;15:201-15. • Kwan JL, Lo L, Sampson M, Shojania KG. Medication reconciliation during transitions of care as a patient safety strategy. Ann Intern Med. 2013;158:397-403. • Gardner R, Li Q, Baier RR, Butterfield K, Coleman EA, Gravenstein S. Is implementation of the care transitions intervention associated with cost avoidance after hospital discharge? J Gen Intern Med. E-published 2014. • Coleman EA, Parry C, Chalmers S, Min S. The care transitions intervention. Arch Intern Med. 2006;166:1822-28. • Soong C et al. Development of a checklist of safe discharge practices for hospital patients. Journal of Hospital Medicine. 2013;8:444-9. • Hume AL et al. Improving care transitions: current practice and future opportunities for pharmacists. Pharmacotherapy. 2012;32:e326-37.

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