Medicines Reconciliation in the Emergency Department: Important Prescribing Discrepancies between the Shared Medication Record and Patients’ Actual Use of Medication
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Patient Characteristics
2.2. Number of Prescribing Discrepancies
2.3. Types of Prescribing Discrepancies
2.4. Factors Associated with the Rate of Prescribing Discrepancies
2.5. Medicines Reconciliations Completed during Normal Working Hours
3. Discussion
3.1. Main Findings
3.2. Results in Context of Other Studies
3.3. Updating the SMR: Possible Solutions and Reflections
3.4. Strengths and Limitations
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Ethics Approval
4.2. Setting
4.3. Design and Patients
4.4. Data Collection and the Best Possible Medication History
4.5. Outcomes
4.6. Statistics
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
ATC-Drug Group (Level 2) | Description | Number of Discrepancies, n (%) |
---|---|---|
A02 | Drugs for acid related disorders | 25 (22.7) |
N02 | Analgesics | 13 (11.8) |
C09 | Agents acting on the renin-angiotensin system | 11 (10.0) |
A06 | Drugs for constipation | 5 (4.5) |
B01 | Antithrombotic agents | 5 (4.5) |
A12 | Mineral supplements | 5 (4.5) |
C10 | Lipid modifying agents | 5 (4.5) |
C01 | Cardiac therapy | 5 (4.5) |
R03 | Drugs for obstructive airway diseases | 4 (3.6) |
B03 | Antianemic preparations | 4 (3.6) |
J01 | Antibacterials for systemic use | 4 (3.6) |
N03 | Antiepileptics | 4 (3.6) |
N05 | Psycholeptics | 3 (2.7) |
A11 | Vitamins | 3 (2.7) |
N06 | Psychoanaleptics | 2 (1.8) |
A10 | Drugs used in diabetes | 2 (1.8) |
M01 | Anti-inflammatory and antirheumatic products | 2 (1.8) |
H02 | Corticosteroids for systemic use | 2 (1.8) |
R01 | Nasal preparations | 1 (0.9) |
C03 | Diuretics | 1 (0.9) |
M03 | Muscle relaxants | 1 (0.9) |
S01 | Ophthalmologicals | 1 (0.9) |
L01 | Antineoplastic agents | 1 (0.9) |
D01 | Antifungals for dermatological use | 1 (0.9) |
Covariate (Number of Patients) | Incidence Rate Ratio | Confidence Interval | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|
Age, years | |||
<65 (44) 65–79 (years) (30) ≥80 (years) (26) | Ref 0.67 0.53 | Ref 0.45–0.99 0.33–0.86 | Ref 0.514 0.119 |
Female Male 65–79 (52) | Ref 0.98 | Ref 0.68–1.43 | Ref 1.00 |
All models are adjusted for age and sex | |||
Days since the last SMR update * | |||
First tertile: 0–27 (33) Second tertile: 28–114 (28) Third tertile: ≥115 (29) | Ref 1.27 1.14 | Ref 0.85–1.89 0.76–1.73 | Ref 1.00 1.00 |
Who updated the SMR last * | |||
Hospital (37) Outpatients clinic (29) GP (24) | Ref 1.03 1.22 | Ref 0.69–1.54 0.82–1.81 | Ref 1.00 1.00 |
Time of admission to the ED | |||
During normal working hours (48) Outside normal working hours (52) | Ref 2.59 | Ref 1.84–3.63 | Ref <0.001 |
Help with medication dispensing | |||
No (71) Yes (29) | Ref 0.18 | Ref 0.10–0.33 | Ref <0.001 |
Triage level | |||
1 or 2 (23) 3 (51) 4 (26) | Ref 0.97 0.79 | Ref 0.62–1.53 0.45–1.37 | Ref 1.00 1.00 |
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Demographic Data | Median (IQR) or n (%) |
---|---|
Sex (men) | 52 (52) |
Age (years) | 66.5 (53–80) |
Admitted during normal working hours 8:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. | 48 (48) |
Admitted outside normal working hours 3:01 p.m.–07:59 a.m. | 52 (52) |
Referred to the ED by a GP or Outpatient clinic | 37 (37) |
Referred to the ED by an emergency or out-of-hours service healthcare professional | 55 (55) |
Self-referral to the ED | 8 (8) |
Triage level ≥ 3 | 78 (78) |
Length of hospital stay | 2 (1–4) |
Patients with a hospital interaction within 90 days before index admission | 66 (66) |
eGFR mL/min/1.73 m2 | 83 (56–90) |
<60 mL/min/1.73 m2 | 29 (29) |
Medication listed in the SMR | 10 (7–13) |
Medication used (regularly scheduled and PRN) | 8 (5–11) |
Medication used (regularly scheduled) | 6 (3–9) |
Patients using ≥1 regular medications | 93 (93) |
Patients using ≥5 regular medications | 63 (63) |
Days since the last SMR update * | 59 (14–154) |
<30 days since the last SMR update | 35 (35) |
<31–89 days since the last SMR update | 16 (16) |
≥90 days since the last SMR update | 39 (39) |
GP completed last update of the SMR * | 24 (26) |
Help with medication dispensing | 29 (29) |
Types of Discrepancies | Discrepancies, n (%) | Patients, % |
---|---|---|
Order not in use | 157 (65) | 61 |
Incorrect dose frequency | 37 (16) | 24 |
Omission of order | 29 (12) | 15 |
Duplicate order | 9 (4) | 9 |
Incorrect dosage | 8 (3) | 6 |
Covariate (Number of Patients) | Incidence Rate Ratio | Confidence Interval | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|
Age, years | |||
<65 (44) 65–79 (30) ≥80 (26) | Ref 0.58 0.49 | Ref 0.48–0.71 0.38–0.92 | Ref <0.001 <0.001 |
Female Male 65–79 (52) | Ref 0.96 | Ref 0.80–1.15 | Ref 1.00 |
All models are adjusted for age and sex | |||
Days since the last SMR update * | |||
First tertile: 0–27 (33) Second tertile: 28–114 (28) Third tertile: ≥115 (29) | Ref 1.16 1.53 | Ref 0.96–1.40 1.29–1.82 | Ref 1.00 <0.001 |
Who updated the SMR last * | |||
Hospital (37) Outpatients clinic (29) GP (24) | Ref 1.02 1.19 | Ref 0.84–1.23 0.98–1.43 | Ref 1.00 0.836 |
Time of admission to the ED | |||
During normal working hours (48) Outside normal working hours (52) | Ref 1.04 | Ref 0.87–1.24 | Ref 1.00 |
Help with medication dispensing | |||
No (71) Yes (29) | Ref 0.31 | Ref 0.24–0.39 | Ref <0.001 |
Triage level | |||
1 or 2 (23) 3 (51) 4 (26) | Ref 0.95 1.16 | Ref 0.75–1.19 0.90–1.49 | Ref 1.00 1.005 |
Time | Number of Patients | Patients with ≥1 Prescribing Discrepancy, n (%) |
---|---|---|
Admitted during normal working hours (8.00 a.m.–3.00 p.m.) | 49 | 37 (76) |
Admitted outside normal working hours (3.01 p.m.–7.59 a.m.), but still admitted the following morning (until at least 9.30 a.m.) | 35 | 27 (77) |
Admitted and discharged outside normal working hours (3.01 p.m.–7.59 a.m.) | 16 | 15 (94) |
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Andersen, T.S.; Gemmer, M.N.; Sejberg, H.R.C.; Jørgensen, L.M.; Kallemose, T.; Andersen, O.; Iversen, E.; Houlind, M.B. Medicines Reconciliation in the Emergency Department: Important Prescribing Discrepancies between the Shared Medication Record and Patients’ Actual Use of Medication. Pharmaceuticals 2022, 15, 142. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph15020142
Andersen TS, Gemmer MN, Sejberg HRC, Jørgensen LM, Kallemose T, Andersen O, Iversen E, Houlind MB. Medicines Reconciliation in the Emergency Department: Important Prescribing Discrepancies between the Shared Medication Record and Patients’ Actual Use of Medication. Pharmaceuticals. 2022; 15(2):142. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph15020142
Chicago/Turabian StyleAndersen, Tanja Stenholdt, Mia Nimb Gemmer, Hayley Rose Constance Sejberg, Lillian Mørch Jørgensen, Thomas Kallemose, Ove Andersen, Esben Iversen, and Morten Baltzer Houlind. 2022. "Medicines Reconciliation in the Emergency Department: Important Prescribing Discrepancies between the Shared Medication Record and Patients’ Actual Use of Medication" Pharmaceuticals 15, no. 2: 142. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph15020142
APA StyleAndersen, T. S., Gemmer, M. N., Sejberg, H. R. C., Jørgensen, L. M., Kallemose, T., Andersen, O., Iversen, E., & Houlind, M. B. (2022). Medicines Reconciliation in the Emergency Department: Important Prescribing Discrepancies between the Shared Medication Record and Patients’ Actual Use of Medication. Pharmaceuticals, 15(2), 142. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph15020142