Abstract

BackgroundThe increasing adoption of hospital electronic prescribing and medication administration (ePA) systems has driven a wealth of research around the impact on patient safety. Yet relatively little research has sought to understand the effects on staff, particularly pharmacists. We aimed to investigate the effects of ePA on pharmacists’ activities, including interactions with patients and health professionals, and their perceptions of medication safety risks.MethodsA mixed methods study comprising quantitative direct observations of ward pharmacists before and after implementation of ePA in an English hospital, and semi-structured interviews post-ePA. Quantitative data comprised multi-dimensional work activity sampling to establish the proportion of time ward pharmacists spent on different tasks, with whom and where. These data were extrapolated to estimate task duration. Qualitative interviews with pharmacists explored perceived impact on (i) ward activities, (ii) interactions with patients and different health professionals, (iii) locations where tasks were carried out, and (iv) medication errors.ResultsObservations totalled 116 h and 50 min. Task duration analysis suggested screening inpatient medication increased by 16 mins per 10 patients reviewed (p = 0.002), and searching for paper drug charts or computer decreased by 2 mins per 10 patients reviewed (p = 0.001). Pharmacists mainly worked alone (58% of time pre- and 65% post-ePA, p = 0.17), with patient interactions reducing from 5 to 2% of time (p = 0.03). Seven main themes were identified from the interviews, underpinned by a core explanatory concept around the enhanced and shifting role of the ward pharmacist post-ePA. Pharmacists perceived there to be a number of valuable safety features with ePA. However, paradoxically, some of these may have also inadvertently contributed to medication errors.ConclusionThis study provides quantitative and qualitative insights into the effects of implementing ePA on ward pharmacists’ activities. Some tasks took longer while others reduced, and pharmacists may spend less time with patients with ePA. Pharmacists valued a number of safety features associated with ePA but also perceived an overall increase in medication risk. Pharmacy staff demonstrated a degree of resilience to ensure ‘business as usual’ by enhancing and adapting their role.

Highlights

  • The increasing adoption of hospital electronic prescribing and medication administration systems has driven a wealth of research around the impact on patient safety

  • Six of the seven pharmacists covered both the admissions and medicine-for-the-elderly wards during the observation period; these six pharmacists participated in the interviews

  • Interview findings Overall, we identified seven main themes from the interview transcripts: (i) more efficient and effective screening of medications post-electronic prescribing and medication administration (ePA), (ii) more time-consuming daily work, (iii) fewer patient interactions and a less natural communication mode, (iv) more interactions with other health professionals but less face-to-face communication, (v) discussions with other health professionals and patients are more focused on problem solving, (vi) patients valued over medical records as a reliable source of medication history, and (vii) higher prevalence of medication errors

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Summary

Introduction

The increasing adoption of hospital electronic prescribing and medication administration (ePA) systems has driven a wealth of research around the impact on patient safety. We aimed to investigate the effects of ePA on pharmacists’ activities, including interactions with patients and health professionals, and their perceptions of medication safety risks. An Australian study suggests pharmacists spend less time with patients as drug charts were no longer at their bedside, more time working alone, were interrupted less often and spent less time reviewing medications [16] These studies were conducted some time ago in hospitals where ePA was implemented on few wards, and mobile computing devices were not always available or were too cumbersome to use at patients’ bedsides. The aim of this study was to investigate the impact of implementing a hospital-wide ePA system on ward pharmacists’ activities, including their interactions with patients and health professionals, and their perceptions of medication safety risks

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