Introducing Unit Dose Dispensing in a University Hospital - Effects on Medication Safety and Dispensing Time

被引:0
|
作者
Ahtiainen, Hanne Katriina [1 ,2 ]
Linden-Lahti, Carita [1 ]
Heininen, Susanna [1 ]
Holmstrom, Anna-Riia [1 ]
Schepel, Lotta [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Helsinki, Fac Pharm, Helsinki, Finland
[2] Helsinki Univ Hosp, HUS Pharm, Helsinki, Finland
[3] Helsinki Univ Hosp, Qual & Patient Safety Unit, Joint Resources, Helsinki, Finland
关键词
medication error; unit dose; automation; barcode scanning; medication systems; hospital; drug dispensing; DRUG DISTRIBUTION-SYSTEMS; ADMINISTRATION SYSTEM; ERRORS; IMPACT; TECHNOLOGY;
D O I
10.2147/RMHP.S497454
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Purpose: Unit dose (UD) medications reduce manual steps in the medication management and use process and enable electronic documentation by barcode scanning. This study aimed to explore the effects of introduced unit doses on medication safety and time spent on medication dispensing. Patients and Methods: Direct before-and-after observations were conducted in an inpatient internal medicine ward at Helsinki University Hospital. The prevalence of medication and procedural errors and time nurses spent dispensing medications at patient- specific doses were observed 10 weekdays before and after introducing unit doses of selected medications. To complement the observations, a separate survey was used to investigate nurses' perceptions of medication dispensing. Quantitative analysis was performed. Results: During the observations, medications were dispensed for 208 patients (n=1359 medications) before and 221 patients (n = 1171) after introducing unit doses. After UD implementation, 45.3% (n=530/1171) of the medications were dispensed as UDs. Medication and procedural errors were reduced (from 3.2% to 1.7% and 37.4% to 13.9%, respectively; p<0.05). Barcode scanning-related problems decreased from 21.4% to 1.8% (p<0.05) after implementation. The unit doses did not change the median time used to dispense medications to the patient, although the time used to dispense a single medication increased. In the survey, nurses reported improvements in barcode scanning but also indicated problems with handling unit doses and were worried about increased plastic waste. Conclusion: Piloted unit doses decreased medication and procedural errors. Barcode scanning improved, which supported electronic closed-loop medication management in the study hospital. Unit doses in a fully automated process should be further studied for their effects on the dispensing time. In addition, controlling the amount of plastic waste in the unit dose dispensing should be considered.
引用
收藏
页码:843 / 854
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Automated medication-dispensing system in two hospital emergency departments
    Gordon, JO
    Hadsall, RS
    Schommer, JC
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HEALTH-SYSTEM PHARMACY, 2005, 62 (18) : 1917 - 1923
  • [42] Unit dose drug dispensing systems in hospitals: a systematic review of medication error reduction and cost-effectiveness
    Gallina, Matteo
    Testagrossa, Mirko
    Provenzani, Alessio
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL PHARMACY, 2025,
  • [43] Medication safety in community pharmacy: Impact of sociotechnical factors on dispensing errors
    Parekh, A.
    Szeinbach, S. L.
    Seoane-Vazquez, E.
    VALUE IN HEALTH, 2007, 10 (03) : A22 - A22
  • [44] Medication errors in hospitals:: computerized unit dose drug dispensing system versus ward stock distribution system
    Fontan, JE
    Maneglier, V
    Nguyen, VX
    Loirat, C
    Brion, F
    PHARMACY WORLD & SCIENCE, 2003, 25 (03): : 112 - 117
  • [45] The 'Back Office' of a Dispensing Cabinet: Technology and Work Contributing to Medication Safety
    Lichtner, Valentina
    Prgomet, Mirela
    Franklin, Bryony Dean
    Westbrook, Johanna, I
    DIGITAL PERSONALIZED HEALTH AND MEDICINE, 2020, 270 : 1405 - 1406
  • [46] Effect of automated unit dose dispensing with barcode scanning on medication administration errors: An uncontrolled before and after study
    Jessurun, Janique
    Hunfeld, Nicole
    Van Rosmalen, Joost
    Van Dijk, Monique
    Van Den Bemt, Patricia
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR QUALITY IN HEALTH CARE, 2022, 34 (03)
  • [47] Effects of mental demands during dispensing on perceived medication safety and employee well-being: A study of workload in pediatric hospital pharmacies
    Holden, Richard J.
    Patel, Neal R.
    Scanlon, Matthew C.
    Shalaby, Theresa M.
    Arnold, Judi M.
    Karsh, Ben-Tzion
    RESEARCH IN SOCIAL & ADMINISTRATIVE PHARMACY, 2010, 6 (04): : 293 - 306
  • [48] Medication Dispensing by Pharmacy Technicians Improves Efficiency and Patient Safety at a Geriatric Ward at a Danish Hospital: A Pilot Study
    Kjeldsen, Lene Juel
    Schlunsen, Maja
    Meijers, Annette
    Hansen, Steffan
    Christensen, Camilla
    Bender, Tanja
    Ratajczyk, Barbara
    PHARMACY, 2023, 11 (03)
  • [49] UNIT DOSE DISPENSING OF CHROMIC PHOSPHATE P-32 SUSPENSION
    HUNG, JC
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL PHARMACY, 1994, 51 (24): : 3081 - 3081
  • [50] EFFECTIVE DECENTRALIZED UNIT DOSE DISPENSING ON A ONE-SHIFT BASIS
    WALSH, HC
    THOMASON, MR
    DAVIS, NM
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HOSPITAL PHARMACY, 1968, 25 (05): : 249 - &