E N D
1. The Impact of Barcode Point-of-Care Technology on Patient Safety Sherry Anderson RN, BSN
Director Float Pool, Internal Quality Improvement Consultant
St. Mary’s Hospital Medical Center
&
Russell Lewis
Senior Vice President &Chief Operating Officer
Bridge Medical Inc.
2. “Call To Arms” Federal legislation
State legislation
Regulatory initiatives
Purchaser incentives
Consumer awareness
3. Where Do Medication Errors Occur?
4. Frequency of medication errors Archives of Internal Medicine, Vol. 162, SEP 9, 2002
Random sample of 36 institutions
Direct observation
Narrow definition of error
Potential ADE rate determined by 3-physician advisory panel
Conclusions:
Medication errors are common, 19%
1 out of every 5 doses !
7% of all errors were rated as potentially harmful
40 ADE per day in a typical 300 patient facility
5. Error Types
6. ADE/Hospital AdmissionMed Error/ADE Conversion
7. Where Do Medication Errors Occur?
8. Intercepting Medication Errors
9. Barcode Proponents T. Thompson, Sec’y Health and Human Services
American Society of Health-System Pharmacists
National Coordinating Council of Medication Error Reporting and Prevention
Institute for Safe Medication Practices
FDA
10. Barcoding at the Point-of-Care 91% of US hospitals use computers to process medication prescriptions
Less than 13-15% of all US hospitals use computers for initiating medication prescriptions
Few US hospitals use barcoding to verify the right patient is receiving the right drug
11. Barcode Medication Administration Technology Nurse barcode scans name tag
Nurse barcode scans patient identification bracelet
Patient MAR appears on bedside laptop or hand-held device
Scheduled and PRN meds are scanned
Warnings/alerts are issued when indicated
Automatic documentation of administration activities
12. Barcode Technology Series of vertical lines and spaces that scanner converts to electrical signal understood by computer
Used in grocery stores since 1970s
Can store alpha and numeric and information
Provides accurate, fast, real-time data collection and entry
Offers exceptional security
Minimizes errors associated with manual data entry
13. Percent Medications Barcoded by Manufacture Approximately 30% of all manufactured drugs are identified with a barcode
FDA is taking steps to mandate barcoding
With analysis of high use meds, can barcode to maximize barcode scannable administrations (85%-90%)
Automation and service based packaging and barcode labeling solutions
14. BPOC Information Flow
15. Barcoding at the Point-of-Care Medication Administration
Transfusion Error Checking
Specimen Collection
Supply and Procedure Charge Capture
16. St. Marys Hospital Medical Center 350 beds
Level II tertiary care center
Shared Governance Nursing model
Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI) culture
Magnet Nursing Services Recognition Award for Acute Care Nursing Service
17. Where Do Medication Errors Occur?
18. Violation of “5 Rights”
19. Our Experience 60% of our reported errors were in the administration part of the process
Previous changes had not had an impact on the error rate
Knew technology had to be our next step for improvement
Developed proposal and received approval to partner in this project
20. Cost of Errors
21. Information Technology Solutions
22. Improvement Focus Identified previous process improvement changes
Identified gaps in achieving additional improvement
Defined technology solution to provide a safety net at the bedside
Real time information
Accurate, consistent documentation
Enhanced pain management
Billing accuracy
23. Levels of BPOC
24. Bar-Coding Solves the Problem Provides safety net at the bedside
Intercepts medication errors
Automatically documents
Automates error reporting
Integrated with nursing work flow and complementary to existing clinical applications
25. Implementing Barcode enabled Point of Care (BPOC) Interdisciplinary approach
Identify linkages
Administrative Council
Risk Management
P&T
QI Council
Practice Council
Identify key customers/stakeholders
Establish a team
26. Departments Affected Departments affected by changes in the medication process
Pharmacy
Nursing
Medical Staff
Information Technology
Business Office
Clinical Engineering
Housekeeping
Plant
Human Resources
Telecommunications
27. Implement for Success Clinical champions
Strong management support
Physician champion
Timely response to concerns, questions
Constant, daily communication
Identify measurements of success before implementation begins
Dedicated IT support
28. Goals and Expectations(Hospital Wide) Automatic recording of errors/near misses
50% decrease medication incidents
50% decrease in near misses
Eliminate duplicate charting
Simplified/accurate billing process
Easier physician access to information
Quick quality check for trends
Knowledge enhancement with immediate feedback
29. Our Technology Solution Barcode enabled, wireless, touch screen computer
Software checks to assure 5 rights are met
Warning screens prompt the nurse
Online order verification
Work sheet
Real time, electronic documentation
30. Identify Barcode Needs Look at internal systems first
Identify which medications get to the patient
Can the systems providing those labels support bar-coding?
Can the systems support a patient-specific barcode, patient account number and order number?
Can the systems support the NDC bar code?
31. Address Barcode Needs in Your Organization Identify medications already bar-coded by the manufacturer
Determine which medications pharmacy produces that are patient specific
Evaluate the ability of existing pharmacy system printers to add barcode to labels
Establish process to verify medications against your formulary
Create Patient ID bracelets with barcodes
Develop Employee ID badges with barcodes
32. Barcoding at the Point-of-Care(BPOC)
33. MedPointTM
37. Bedside MAR
38. Warning Message Definitions Twelve warning messages may be generated during medication administration. These are: dose omitted, early, late, and duplicate med; max dose reached, no order, order d/c, order expired, wrong route, wrong range, wrong single dose value, and future dose.Twelve warning messages may be generated during medication administration. These are: dose omitted, early, late, and duplicate med; max dose reached, no order, order d/c, order expired, wrong route, wrong range, wrong single dose value, and future dose.
39. Warning Message Algorithm
40. Clinical Example A patient had an order for Glyburide (Diabeta) 5 mg by mouth every day
The nurse scanned the barcode on what she thought was Glyburide
The following warning appeared:
41. Clinical Example Upon closer inspection what she had scanned was Glipizide (Glucotrol)
Pharmacy had dispensed Glipizide instead of Glyburide
Besides being from the same classification, these two generic drugs have similar sounding names and nearly identical packaging.
42. “Barcode Order Not For Patient” November 13, 2001, 08:59, Room 301-A
The nurse barcoded “Dalteparin Sodium” and received warning: “Barcode Order Not for Patient.”
The Nurse cancelled transaction. No other attempts to give this med over course of patient’s hospital stay.
Of interest, on same day, same nurse administered Dalteparin Sodium, without this warning, to a patient in Room 303-B.
43. “Order Discontinued” October 22, 2001, Room 652-B
The nurse selected “Warfarin Sodium 5 mg” and received warning: “Order discontinued”. The Nurse cancelled the transaction.
November 5, 2001, Room 631-A
The nurse selected “Potassium Chloride (K-Dur SR tab) 20 mEq” and received warning: “Order discontinued”. The Nurse cancelled the transaction.
45. Automates Documentation
46. Pre and Post Implementation Comparison Pre-Implementation
Incomplete MAR verification
Manual MAR entries
Inaccurate documentation
Incomplete charting
Limited allergy information
Physician access to information complicated
Voluntary reporting
47. Nursing Workflow Benefits Automates worksheets, documentation
Eliminates nightly MAR reconciliation
Clarifies orders
On-line reference
48. 59% decrease in errors in 6 months
Nurses administer average 18000 doses per month on one nursing unit
500 times per month they heed the warning messages & cancel out (3% near miss rate) Medication Incident Rate
49. Recurring Meds with Warnings
50. Summary data
51. Data Analysis
53. Near Miss Detail RN selected order number XXXX for atenolol 25mg oral q am via ordered med on 01/18/02 at 17:25 and received this warning: Order discontinued as of 01/18/02 at 15:01. The user then cancelled and there were no further administrations of this med within the next 60 minutes.
54. Resources Nursing
1.0 fte RN
Information Technology
1.5 fte
Pharmacy
.5 fte pharmacy tech
.5 - 1.0 fte pharmacist
55. Nurse Satisfaction Recruitment & retention tool
Positive nursing surveys
“BPOC moments”
56. Does The System Provide Added Safety That Is Important To You?
57. Additional Benefits Charging at administration/phlebotomy
Avoids Medicare fraud/abuse liability
Assists meeting regulatory standards
Feeds inventory management
58. What Didn’t Work Housekeeping support
Information Services support
Missed key pharmacy member
59. Current Status Operational on 3 Med-Surg Units and the Neuro ICU
Expanding to adult Med-Surg and ICU beds in 2002
Requested capital dollars to expand to Peds, Psych and other specialty units in 2003
60. Summary Major change for Pharmacy and Nursing
The point of care system has provided the desired error reductions
Next Steps
Expand and refine the system
Bar code remaining medications
Utilize data to implement changes
Blood bank, specimen and billing
61. “Any effort to decrease medication errors must be interdisciplinary and include grass roots clinicians – those who do the day to day work of giving medications to patients.”
Sherry Anderson RN, BSN
62. Questions?