1. Medication Safety in Two Intensive Care Units of a Community Teaching Hospital After Electronic Health Record Implementation: Sociotechnical and Human Factors Engineering Considerations
- Author
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Roger L. Brown, Mark Johnson, Sandeep Kukreja, Randi Cartmill, Tosha B. Wetterneck, Bonnie L. Paris, Mary Ann Blosky, Kenneth E. Wood, James M. Walker, Peter Hoonakker, Pascale Carayon, and Robert Y Kim
- Subjects
Sociotechnical system ,Leadership and Management ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,MEDLINE ,Human factors and ergonomics ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,medicine.disease ,Teaching hospital ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Harm ,Documentation ,Electronic health record ,Intensive care ,Medicine ,Operations management ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Medical emergency ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE The aim of the study was to assess the impact of Electronic Health Record (EHR) implementation on medication safety in two intensive care units (ICUs). METHODS Using a prospective pre-post design, we assessed 1254 consecutive admissions to two ICUs before and after an EHR implementation. Each medication event was evaluated with regard to medication error (error type, medication-management stage) and impact on patient (severity of potential or actual harm). RESULTS We identified 4063 medication-related events either pre-implementation (2074 events) or post-implementation (1989 events). Although the overall potential for harm due to medication errors decreased post-implementation only 2 of the 3 error rates were significantly lower post-implementation. After EHR implementation, we observed reductions in rates of medication errors per admission at the stages of transcription (0.13-0, P < 0.001), dispensing (0.49-0.16, P < 0.001), and administration (0.83-0.56, P = 0.011). Within the ordering stage, 4 error types decreased post-implementation (orders with omitted information, error-prone abbreviations, illegible orders, failure to renew orders) and 4 error types increased post-implementation (orders of wrong drug, orders containing a wrong start or stop time, duplicate orders, orders with inappropriate or wrong information). Within the administration stage, we observed a reduction of late administrations and increases in omitted administrations and incorrect documentation. CONCLUSIONS Electronic Health Record implementation in two ICUs was associated with both improvement and worsening in rates of specific error types. Further safety improvements require a nuanced understanding of how various error types are influenced by the technology and the sociotechnical work system of the technology implementation. Recommendations based on human factors engineering principles are provided for reducing medication errors.
- Published
- 2021
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