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Reducing Omitted Doses through Audit Ruth Brown Quality and Governance Pharmacist Kent Community NHS Foundation Trust [email protected] Introduction • • • Describe Kent Community Health NHS Foundation Trust Present the development of an omitted dose audit Present a brief summary of the findings from five years of collecting audit data. Kent Community NHS Health Foundation Trust Kent Community NHS Foundation Trust (KCHFT) serves a population of 1.4 million across Kent, and 600,000 in East Sussex and London with a staff of 5,000. We provide wide-ranging NHS care for people in the community, in a range of settings including people’s own homes; nursing homes; health clinics; community hospitals; minor injury units and in mobile units. Background NPSA Rapid Response Alert 2010- Reducing harm from omitted and delayed medicines in hospital In response an omitted dose audit was designed and conducted in 2011 in 12 community hospitals across Kent. Audit Aims: • to ascertain current medication omission rates • to ensure appropriate action is taken subsequent to incidents • to encourage incident reporting related to omission or delay • to reduce harm from omitted and delayed medicines. Methodology 2011 • • • • All pharmacy staff working in community hospitals collected the data from all charts from each ward. 14 days medicines administrations were checked for each patient. Omitted dose rate calculated from total administrations that should have been given. Risk of harm calculated from UKMi critical medicines list (2010, revised in 2016) Methodology 2011 • Assessing risk of harm using UKMi definitions Low risk: Nil or negligible patient impact with nil or minor intervention required; no increase in length of stay. Moderate risk: Significant short-term patient impact with moderate intervention required; increase in length of hospital stay possible. Significant risk: Significant or catastrophic long-term patient impact with ongoing intervention required; long increase in length of stay possible. 2011 Findings • • • • Omitted dose rate was 1.76% with and without codes Problems with lack of consistency of drug chart omission codes and lack of consistency with multiple staff collecting data Nursing staff lack of knowledge regarding critical medicines Good practice noted to be reviewing the drug charts after the medicine rounds in some wards with low omitted dose rates Target setting in 2011 The initial omitted dose rate targets in 2011 were set at:Target: The omission rate for medication omissions (with and without codes) for a Community Hospital Ward to be less than 1.5 % Target: The omission rate for medication omissions (without codes) for Community Hospital Ward to be less than 1.0% Target: The omission rate for medication omissions (with and without codes) in a Community Hospital where the risk is significant to the patient to be less than 0.5% Methodology changes since 2011 • • • One pharmacist responsible for data collection each year Targets changed to 0% omitted dose i.e. zero tolerance. A hard line was taken. Target: 100% peer checking Omitted dose by risk Percentage of risk errors from omitted doses The percentage of ‘significant risk’ errors: 0.25% in 2013 0.11% in 2014 0.21% in 2015. Increase The percentage of ‘moderate risk’ error: 0.24% in 2013 0.12% in 2014 0.10% in 2015 Decrease The percentage of ‘low risk’ error: 0.92% in 2013 0.94% in 2014 0.46% in 2015 Decrease Quality Improvement • • • • • Drug chart standardised across the whole trust Medicine charts reviewed after drug rounds adopted as good practice for all wards. Peer checking form introduced in 2013 to aid nursing staff with the process. Significant increase in peer checking shown in 2015 with almost half the wards peer checking 90-100% of the time and the rest 50-90% of the time. Management of staff with responsibility/ accountability emphasised Datix reporting encouraged Twice daily delivery requested in tender specification for new supplier of medicines to hospitals Quality Improvement • • • • • Low molecular weight heparins given once a day at the same time each day. Parkinson’s patients are treated separately with additional reminders for nursing staff to administer medicines, for example, mobile phone alarms. Weekly alendronic acid is administered by night staff before breakfast. Process put in place to make sure that patients who are off the ward (for example, renal dialysis) still receive their medication. An agency nurse leaflet has been introduced to convey important information around medicines. Omitted dose rate 2011 – 2015 Thank you! For further information contact: [email protected]