Title of article :
Reducing Missed Medication Doses in Intensive Care Units: A Pharmacist‑Led Intervention
Author/Authors :
Alomar, Mukhtar Jawad Department of Pharmacy Administration - King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh , Kingdom of Saudi Arabia , Ahmad, Sohail Department of Clinical Pharmacy - MAHSA University - Kuala Langat, Selangor, Malaysia , Moustafa, Yahya Department of Pharmacy Administration - King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh , Kingdom of Saudi Arabia , Salim Alharbi, Lafi Department of Pharmacy Administration - King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh , Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Abstract :
The objectives of this study were to investigate the frequency and
reasons for missing doses and impact of a pharmacist‑led intervention to reduce the
missed doses in intensive care units. Methods: This study was completed in two
phases. In the first phase, a retrospective quality assurance audit was conducted to
quantify the problem of missed doses from the pharmacist/nurse communication
slip record. The frequency and potential reasons for missing dose occurrences
were identified and listed, and respective solutions were finalized by a joint
health‑care team. In the second phase of the study, post-intervention analysis was
done for a period of 1 month to check the impact of intervention. The data were
recorded from pharmacy/nursing communication forms for medication, dosage
form, route of administration (ROA), frequency of missed doses, and underlying
reasons for missing doses. Findings: There was a substantial reduction in the
number of incidences of missed doses in post-intervention phase. The number of
events decreased from 190 (pre-intervention; 2 months) to 11 (post-intervention;
1 month), 389 to 87, and 133 to 12 for automatic stop order, unknown reason, and
late mix medication, respectively. No missed dose event was recorded secondary
to order overseen and inactive patient status in post-intervention phase. Moreover,
identified reasons, ROA, frequency, and the system status were the significant
predictors of missing doses. Conclusion: The findings of this study emphasized
the need to introduce better documentation procedures and continuous surveillance
system to decrease the number of missing doses and further improve already
established drug distribution service
Keywords :
pharmacists , missed doses , Clinical , intensive care unit , intervention , medication error
Journal title :
Journal of Research in Pharmacy Practice