Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ahro.austin.org.au/austinjspui/handle/1/33222
Title: Accuracy of medication histories derived from an Australian cloud-based repository of prescribed and dispensed medication records.
Austin Authors: Elliott, Rohan A ;Taylor, Simone E ;Koo, Stella M K;Nguyen, Anny D;Liu, Esther;Loh, Grace
Affiliation: Pharmacy
Faculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Monash University, Victoria, Australia.
Pharmacy Department, Eastern Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Pharmacy Department, Peninsula Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Issue Date: Jun-2023
Date: 2022
Publication information: Internal Medicine Journal 2023-06; 53(6)
Abstract: Obtaining accurate medication histories at transitions of care is challenging, but important for patient safety. Prescription exchange services (PES) securely transfer electronic prescription and dispensing records between prescribers and pharmacies, which is potentially useful data for determining medication histories. To evaluate the accuracy of PES-derived medication histories. Prospective observational study, at two Australian tertiary-referral health services. A convenience sample of adult inpatients was recruited. The main outcome measure was: proportion of patients with ≥1 errors in their PES-derived pre-admission medication histories, compared with gold-standard best-possible medication histories, including prescribed and non-prescribed medications, obtained by pharmacists using multiple sources including patient/carer interview. Of 154 patients (median age 76 years; interquartile range (IQR) 64-84 years; median 10.0 pre-admission medications; IQR 6.0-14.0), 153 (99.4%) had ≥1 errors in their PES-derived medication history (median 6.0 errors per patient; IQR 4.0-9.0). Excluding when-required medications, 146 (94.8%) patients had >1 errors (median 4.0 errors per patient; IQR 2.0-6.0). Omission was the most common error, affecting 549 (33.3%) of 1648 current medications (median 3.0; IQR 1.0-5.0 per patient); 396 (72.1%) omissions were over-the-counter medicines. Dose-regimen errors affected 276 (25.1%) of 1099 current medications captured in PES-derived medication histories (median 1.0 error per patient; IQR 0.0-3.0). Commission errors (medications in PES-derived histories that were not current) affected 224 (16.9%) of 1323 medications (median 1.0 error per patient; IQR 1.0-2.0). Medication histories derived solely from a cloud-based medication record repository had a high error rate compared with patients' actual medication use. Like all medication history sources, data from cloud-based repositories need to be verified with additional sources including the patient and/or their carer.
URI: https://ahro.austin.org.au/austinjspui/handle/1/33222
DOI: 10.1111/imj.15857
ORCID: 0000-0002-7750-9724
0000-0002-0592-518X
Journal: Internal Medicine Journal
Start page: 1002
End page: 1009
PubMed URL: 35719101
ISSN: 1445-5994
Type: Journal Article
Subjects: electronic health record
electronic prescribing
medication error
medication reconciliation
pharmaceutical preparation
Medication Errors/prevention & control
Australia/epidemiology
Appears in Collections:Journal articles

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