Abstract

To understand the extent to which behaviors consistent with high quality medication reconciliation occurred in primary care settings and explore barriers to high quality medication reconciliation. Fully mixed sequential equal status design including ethnographic observations, semi-structured interviews, and surveys. Primary care practices within an integrated healthcare delivery system in the United States. We conducted 170 observations of patient encounters across 15 primary care clinics, 48 semi-structured interviews with staff, and 10 semi-structured interviews with patients. We also sent out surveys to 2,541 eligible staff with 616 responses (24% response rate) and to 5,132 eligible patients with 577 responses (11% response rate). Inconsistency emerged as a major barrier to effective medication reconciliation. This inconsistency was present across a variety of factors such as the lack of standardized workflows for conducting medication reconciliation, a lack of knowledge about medication and the process of medication reconciliation, varying levels of importance ascribed to medication reconciliation, and inadequate integration of medication reconciliation into clinical workflows. Findings were generally consistent across all data collection methods. We have identified several barriers which impact the process of medication reconciliation in primary care settings. Our key finding is that the process of medication reconciliation is plagued by inconsistencies which contribute to inaccurate medication lists. These inconsistencies can be broken down into several categories (standardization, knowledge, importance, and inadequate integration) which can be targets for future studies and interventions.

Highlights

  • Inaccurate or incomplete medication reconciliation results in over 100,000 preventable hospital admissions and over $1 billion in excess healthcare costs yearly [1,2,3,4]

  • Inconsistency emerged as a major barrier to effective medication reconciliation

  • This inconsistency was present across a variety of factors such as the lack of standardized workflows for conducting medication reconciliation, a lack of knowledge about medication and the process of medication reconciliation, varying levels of importance ascribed to medication reconciliation, and inadequate integration of medication reconciliation into clinical workflows

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Summary

Introduction

Inaccurate or incomplete medication reconciliation results in over 100,000 preventable hospital admissions and over $1 billion in excess healthcare costs yearly [1,2,3,4]. The process of medication reconciliation does not always occur and when it does, the effectiveness is uncertain [6, 7] Studies, including those completed in primary care environments, have found that there are often numerous discrepancies between the list held by the patient and that held by the health system [7,8,9,10,11,12,13]. While some of these discrepancies will naturally arise as patients’ conditions and contexts change, often there are barriers which prevent the effective completion of medication reconciliation. There is limited information on the extent through which behaviors consistent with a high-quality medication reconciliation occur in primary care

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