scholarly journals Engineering a foundation for partnership to improve medication safety during care transitions

2019 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-36 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Xiao ◽  
Ephrem Abebe ◽  
Ayse P Gurses

There are major gaps and barriers for patients and caregivers after hospital discharge to achieve safe medication use. Patients and caregivers are often not ready to take on the responsibility for medication management when transitioned from inpatient care. Current approaches tend to focus on adding isolated strategies. A system thinking can enable a fundamental transformation to redesign professionals’ interactions with patients and caregivers with an explicit goal to develop patients and caregivers into true partners, with targeted roles, skills, attitude, knowledge, and tool support. We must recognize the fact that medication safety during care transition and, more so, at patient homes is the property of a “work system”, in which the patient and caregivers are at the center, with collaboration with health professionals. Innovative ideas are needed to engineer work system components by systematically examining professionals’ interactions with patients and caregivers, such as those during hospital stays and transitions (e.g. follow-up phone calls, community pharmacist consults, and home visits). Based on human factors principles, we describe a set of recommendations on engineering partnership with patients and their caregivers at different stages of a care episode, to enable productive interactions among work systems that are distributed and are often limited in their ability to exchange information and co-align their interests.

2015 ◽  
Vol 24 (01) ◽  
pp. 55-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Ammenwerth ◽  
E. Roehrer ◽  
S. Pelayo ◽  
F. Vasseur ◽  
M.-C. Beuscart-Zéphir ◽  
...  

Summary Objectives: Previous research has shown that medication alerting systems face usability issues. There has been no previous attempt to systematically explore the consequences of usability flaws in such systems on users (i.e. usage problems) and work systems (i.e. negative outcomes). This paper aims at exploring and synthesizing the consequences of usability flaws in terms of usage problems and negative outcomes on the work system. Methods: A secondary analysis of 26 papers included in a prior systematic review of the usability flaws in medication alerting was performed. Usage problems and negative outcomes were extracted and sorted. Links between usability flaws, usage problems, and negative outcomes were also analyzed. Results: Poor usability generates a large variety of consequences. It impacts the user from a cognitive, behavioral, emotional, and attitudinal perspective. Ultimately, usability flaws have negative consequences on the workflow, the effectiveness of the technology, the medication management process, and, more importantly, patient safety. Only few complete pathways leading from usability flaws to negative outcomes were identified.Conclusion: Usability flaws in medication alerting systems impede users, and ultimately their work system, and negatively impact patient safety. Therefore, the usability dimension may act as a hidden explanatory variable that could explain, at least partly, the (absence of) intended outcomes of new technology.


Author(s):  
Robin S. Mickelson ◽  
Richard J. Holden

Human Factors and Ergonomics (HFE) has the potential to transform the lives of older adults by helping them better manage their health and disease. Older adults are often beset with multiple chronic illnesses and struggle to manage complex medication regimens. Non-adherence, errors, and poor outcomes are common. New research shows that patients’ health-related activities constitute an effortful, goal-driven type of work called patient work. HFE can play a major role in the study and improvement of patient work performance but current HFE methods are not fully suitable. This is in part because patient work is variable and takes place in home and community settings dissimilar to those commonly studied by healthcare HFE researchers. The objective of this study was to perform a work systems analysis of the medication management work of older adults with heart failure by adapting a method more suitable for the study of patient work. This qualitative longitudinal study used an innovative digital diary data collection method. Fifteen older adults with heart failure made medication-related multimedia recordings over a one-week period followed by an interview. These data were content analyzed according to the Patient Work System model. Results identified 6 organizational (70 instances), 7 task (45 instances), 7 tool (31 instances), 6 patient (31 instances), 4 social (21 instances), and 2 physical work system factors (10 instances). Patient medication performance suffered from a lack of care coordination and integration. Organizational tools such as mail order delivery facilitated access, but many patients devised tools and strategies to address other barriers. The study concluded that there is a need to design task-relevant tools to support and optimize the patients’ medication management work systems.


Author(s):  
Emily Heuck ◽  
Abigail Wooldridge

Care transitions are key to patient safety and remain a safety issue despite previous research. This study examines how the design of care transitions impacts different health care professions. Twenty-nine physicians and nurses were interviewed about operating room to intensive care unit care transitions. We compared relationships between work system elements in positive and negative opinions about two sociotechnical system designs: including team or individual handoffs. Nurses did not express positive opinions of individual handoffs or negative opinions of team handoffs, while physicians expressed positive and negative opinions of both. Relationships between work system elements varied by profession in the positive opinions about team handoffs and negative opinions about individual handoffs. Professional needs and culture may be related to the different perceptions of each handoff. Future work should continue to examine professional differences when developing a flexibly standardized process to ensure all users are considered.


Author(s):  
Régis Vaillancourt ◽  
Annie Pouliot ◽  
Kim Streitenberger ◽  
Sylvia Hyland ◽  
Pierre Thabet

<p><strong>ABSTRACT</strong></p><p><strong>Background:</strong> Inherent risks are associated with the preparation and administration of medications. As such, a key aspect of medication safety is to ensure safe medication management practices.</p><p><strong>Objective:</strong> To identify key medication safety issues and high-alert drug classes that might benefit from implementation of pictograms, for use by health care providers, to enhance medication administration safety. This study was the first step in the development of such pictograms.</p><p><strong>Methods:</strong> Self-identified medication management experts participated in a modified Delphi process to achieve consensus on situations where safety pictograms are required for labelling to optimize safe medication management. The study was divided into 3 phases: issue generation, issue reduction, and issue selection. Issues achieving at least 80% consensus and deemed most essential were selected for future studies. Retained issues were subjected to semiotic analysis, and preliminary pictograms were developed.</p><p><strong>Results:</strong> Of the 87 health care professionals (pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, nurses, and physicians) invited to participate in the Delphi process, 30 participated in all 3 phases. A total of 55 situations that could potentially benefit from safety pictograms were generated initially. Through the Delphi process, these were narrowed down to 10 situations where medication safety might be increased with the use of safety pictograms. For most of the retained issues, between 3 and 6 pictograms were designed, based on the results of the semiotic analysis.</p><p><strong>Conclusions:</strong> The pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, nurses, and physicians participating in this study reached consensus and identified 10 medication administration safety issues that might benefit from the development and implementation of safety pictograms. Pictograms were developed for a total of 9 issues. In follow-up studies, these pictograms will be validated for comprehension and evaluated for effectiveness.</p><p><strong>RÉSUMÉ</strong></p><p><strong>Contexte :</strong> Il y a des risques inhérents associés à la préparation et à l’administration de médicaments. Pour cette raison, l’un des principaux aspects de la sécurité des médicaments est d’assurer des pratiques de gestion des médicaments sécuritaires.</p><p><strong>Objectif :</strong> Déterminer les principales questions de sécurité des médicaments et les classes de médicaments de niveau d’alerte élevé pour lesquelles l’ajout de pictogrammes, destinés aux fournisseurs de soins de santé, permettrait de rendre l’administration de médicaments plus sécuritaire. La présente étude représentait la première étape dans l’élaboration de ces pictogrammes.</p><p><strong>Méthodes :</strong> Des professionnels qui se définissaient comme experts en gestion de médicaments ont participé à un processus Delphi modifié dans le but d’arriver à un consensus à propos des situations où des pictogrammes de sécurité doivent être ajoutés à l’étiquette afin d’optimiser la gestion sécuritaire des médicaments. L’étude a été divisée en trois phases : génération de questions de sécurité, élimination de questions de sécurité et sélection de questions de sécurité. Les questions qui atteignaient un consensus d’au moins 80 % et qui étaient considérées comme les plus essentielles ont été retenues pour des études ultérieures. Les questions de sécurité retenues ont été soumises à une analyse sémiotique, puis des ébauches de pictogrammes ont été créées.</p><p><strong>Résultats :</strong> Parmi les 87 professionnels de la santé (notamment des pharmaciens, des techniciens en pharmacie, du personnel infirmier et des médecins) invités à participer au processus Delphi, 30 ont pris part aux trois étapes. Au total, 55 situations pour lesquelles il pourrait être avantageux d’utiliser des pictogrammes de sécurité ont été générées au départ. Grâce au processus Delphi, ce nombre a été réduit à 10 situations pour lesquelles la sécurité des médicaments pourrait être accrue à l’aide de pictogrammes de sécurité. Pour la plupart des questions retenues, entre trois et six pictogrammes ont été conçus à l’aide des résultats de l’analyse sémiotique.</p><p><strong>Conclusion :</strong> Les pharmaciens, les techniciens en pharmacie, le personnel infirmier et les médecins qui ont participé à l’étude ont atteint un consensus sur dix questions au sujet de l’administration sécuritaire des médicaments pour lesquelles l’élaboration et la mise en place de pictogrammes de sécurité pourraient être avantageuses. Ensuite, des pictogrammes ont été conçus pour neuf questions au total. Dans les études ultérieures, il faudra évaluer l’efficacité des pictogrammes et s’assurer qu’ils sont interprétés correctement.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 382-385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Morcos ◽  
Jonathan Corns ◽  
Jodie Belinda Hillen

A 70-year-old female aged-care resident was referred by her general practitioner for a residential medication management review after nurses reported difficulties with swallowing, episodes of hyperthermia, elevated blood pressure, and tachycardia. These symptoms were accompanied by increasing confusion and drowsiness. Risperidone had recently been prescribed to treat behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia. This case study describes the pharmacist-initiated management of the symptoms through a national medication review program. It demonstrates the valuable role collaborative medication reviews play in managing adverse drug reactions in aged-care.


2006 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 403-422 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhixing Xiao ◽  
Ingmar Björkman

The concept of a high commitment work system (HCWS) has mostly been used in the West to study the relationship between a firm's work systems and organizational performance. In this paper, we introduce a preliminary measure of HCWS in China based on the definition of Baron and Kreps (1999). In study 1, we tested the measure by surveying 442 employees in China's information technology (IT) industry. In study 2, we re-tested the same measure from the perspective of human resource (HR) executives in 126 foreign-invested companies. The analyses not only provided some evidence for the construct validity of this preliminary measure of a high commitment work system, but also produced some interesting results that can only be understood with regards to the history and institutional backgrounds of Chinese organizations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 108-118
Author(s):  
I Nengah Aristana ◽  
I Wayan Arta Artana

The development of the business world now requires all forms of business including cooperatives to do various ways to increase productivity and performance. One of the efforts in increasing productivity and performance is by building a high-performance work system. The purpose of this research is to find out the high performance work system in cooperatives. The number of respondents was 132 respondents with factor analysis analysis techniques. From the results of the analysis conducted found three factors as determinants of high performance work systems, namely the method of task delegation, internal planning and motivation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 52-58
Author(s):  
I Ketut Sutapa

It was needed an ergonomic work system to increase productivity for the vehicle driver work systems involves a lot of physical activity. Regarding preliminary observations, it showed the work system that was implemented still has shortcomings, unlike the work organization. Therefore, it needs to be prioritized to be improved. It becomes healthier, safer, more comfortable, and more productive. The driver’s work system improvement was carried out with an ergonomics approach. The study design used was the same subject design with ten people sample for each group. The study focused on the application of short rest with indicators of workload and musculoskeletal excitability before and after the short rest application. Based on the results of research and discussion can be concluded. The short rest application reduced the workload of vehicle drivers 28% from the category of moderate workloads to being moderate and reducing musculoskeletal complaints 42.21%.


2021 ◽  
Vol 91 ◽  
pp. 103299
Author(s):  
S.M. Hannum ◽  
E. Abebe ◽  
Y. Xiao ◽  
R. Brown ◽  
I.M. Peña ◽  
...  

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