Implementation of hospital electronic medical record Patient Friendly Medication Lists and Interim Medication Administration Charts

Author:

Wembridge Paul12ORCID,Rashed Saly1ORCID,Monypenny Nick1,Rodda Hamish1

Affiliation:

1. Eastern Health Box Hill Australia

2. South West Healthcare Warrnambool Australia

Abstract

AbstractPatients discharged from Australian hospitals require a list of current medications at the point of discharge, which is commonly in the form of a Patient Friendly Medication List (PFML). Furthermore, the provision of an Interim Medication Administration Chart (IMAC) reduces the number of medication administration delays and omissions for patients discharged to residential aged‐care facilities. To increase the adoption of PFMLs and IMACs, a new process was developed for creating PFMLs and IMACs directly from the discharge prescription in the Electronic Medical Record (EMR). This retrospective pre‐ and post‐intervention audit aimed to evaluate 1 year of PFML and IMAC generation from three acute metropolitan hospitals, prior to and after transitioning from pharmacy dispensing software to EMR‐generated documents. Despite similar hospital activity, the transition to EMR‐generated PFMLs and IMACs was associated with a 157% increase in PFML provision (7930 vs 20 373), a 220% increase in IMAC provision (1569 vs 5022) and a 99% reduction in the number of items typed into the pharmacy dispensing software that did not require supply (−59 171/year). Discharge dispensary turnaround times were lower in the post‐intervention period (36 min vs 30 min, p < 0.01). In conclusion, the transition to EMR‐generated PFMLs and IMACs was associated with increased provision of these documents, reduced data entry for items not required to be supplied, decreased risk of transcription errors and shortened time taken for the hospital pharmacy to process discharge items. This project was exempt due to the local policy requirements that constitute research by the Eastern Health Office of Research and Ethics (Reference no: QA21‐094). The justification for this ethics exemption was as follows: the project complies with the National Health and Medical Research Council's Ethical considerations in quality assurance and evaluation activities and met local requirements for an audit or quality assurance activity.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference8 articles.

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4. An audit of the accuracy of medication information in electronic medical discharge summaries linked to an electronic prescribing system;Tan Y;Health Inf Manag J,2018

5. Reducing medication errors in hospital discharge summaries: a randomised controlled trial

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