Medication reconciliation in hospice: a pilot study.

Leonette O Kemp, Priyanka Narula, Mary Lynn McPherson, Ilene Zuckerman
Author Information
  1. Leonette O Kemp: Methodist University Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee 38104, USA. kempl@methodisthealth.org

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Joint Commission required implementation of medication reconciliation processes by January 2006. Medication reconciliation is the practice of acquiring an accurate medication history at each transitional point of care. Potential for errors increases with inaccurate medication histories. This study determined the extent of medication reconciliation errors in hospice.
METHODS: Patients were enrolled from 2 hospices in Maryland (January 2007). An initial medication history was completed by the nurse on hospice admission. The pharmacist did another medication history within 5 days of admission and compared the medication histories. All differences were reported as medication discrepancies.
RESULTS: There were 504 medication discrepancies. Medication omissions occurred most commonly. All patients had at least 1 medication discrepancy (average 8.7 per patient). Overall, 190 drug interactions were identified; most were moderately severe.
CONCLUSION: Terminal patients often use numerous medications increasing the risk of medication errors. Accurate medication histories reduce errors and potential for harm.

MeSH Term

Aged, 80 and over
Drug Interactions
Female
Hospice Care
Humans
Male
Maryland
Medical History Taking
Medication Errors
Nonprescription Drugs
Pilot Projects
Prescription Drugs
Process Assessment, Health Care

Chemicals

Nonprescription Drugs
Prescription Drugs

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0medicationreconciliationerrorsMedicationhistoryhistoriesJanuarystudyhospiceadmissiondiscrepanciespatientsBACKGROUND:JointCommissionrequiredimplementationprocesses2006practiceacquiringaccuratetransitionalpointcarePotentialincreasesinaccuratedeterminedextentMETHODS:Patientsenrolled2hospicesMaryland2007initialcompletednursepharmacistanotherwithin5dayscompareddifferencesreportedRESULTS:504omissionsoccurredcommonlyleast1discrepancyaverage87perpatientOverall190druginteractionsidentifiedmoderatelysevereCONCLUSION:TerminaloftenusenumerousmedicationsincreasingriskAccuratereducepotentialharmhospice:pilot

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