Title: Protecting patients- now and in the future
1Protecting patients-now and in the future
- Linda Matthew
- Senior Pharmacist
- National Patient Safety Agency
2The changing face of chemotherapy
- IV Oral (now)
- Secondary care Primary care
(the future)
3Increasing risk
- Modern health care is complex
- Increased volume of work
- Older and sicker patients
- Complex, new drugs, interventions technology
- Cost constraints efficiency
- Workforce pressures
- Changing expectations
- Changing shape of service delivery
4Public confidence
5Managing the risks in current serviceconfiguratio
ns
- Information is key
- Proactive risk management
- Reactive risk management
6BOPA position statement (2004)
- Standards Manual of Cancer Standards (or equiv)
- Patient remain under care of a specialist
- Policy procedures- IV and oral
- Risk assess the hazards of oral medications
- Prescribing dispensing standards -same for
IV/oral - Education of patients
- Effective communication across care interfaces
- Prescribing and dispensing should be
responsibility of hospital team
7Oral chemotherapy-patient safety incident data
- What does data on incidents reported to the
National Reporting Learning System (NRLS) tell
us?
8National Reporting Learning System (NRLS)
Feedback
International Collaboration Australia USA Europe
NPSA
Standardised reporting
NHS Trusts
PractitionersStaff
Healthcare Commission MHRA NHS Complaints NHS
Litigation Authority
Patients Carers
9Medication report March 07
10Medication Report March 2007
- 7 Key areas for action
- Increase reporting learning from medication
incidents - Implement the safer medication practice
recommendations - Improve staff skills competence
11Medication Report March 2007
- 7 key areas for action
- Minimise dosing errors
- Ensure medicines are not omitted
- Ensure the correct medicines are given to the
correct patient - Document patients medicine allergy status
12NRLS- All incident types v medicationJan 06 to
March 07
13NRLS Medication Incidents reported by care
sector
14NRLS data Nov 03 July 07
- Search terms
- Oral, chemotherapy
- 26 individually named drugs
- 3 years of data from gt 600 organisations
- (gt250 acute sector organisations)
15Degree of harm caused
16Stage in the process
17Medication Error Types
18Top 6 drugs reported
19Key notes
20Recommendations
- Proactive management of risks
- review local systems (BOPA position statement
2004) - Reactive management of risks
- Increase reporting of patient safety incidents
- Review reports to identify local risk trends
- Analyse incidents to identify system weaknesses
- Take action to improve systems
21The changing face of chemotherapy
-
Diagnose - Secondary care
- Monitor
Prescribe - Administer IV
Dispense
22The changing face of chemotherapy
- Secondary care
Diagnose - Primary care Monitor
Prescribe - Self administer
Dispense
23Managing the risks of the future service
configurations
- Information is key
- Define/map out the system
- Proactively assess the risks
- Use incident and other data/info to inform the
process
24Example NPSA alert no 18 anticoagulant therapy
services
- Process
- Search for related safety data
- Map anticoagulant therapy services in the NHS
- Assess the risks in each part of the treatment
process (using SWIFT) - Identify solutions to reduce the risks
25Alert 18 Risk assessment
- Related safety data
- NHSLA data published claims and reports
- NPSA NRLS data
- Published audits reports
- Case reports
26Alert 18 Risk assessment- findings
- Inadequate training work competences
- Inadequate clinical audit and failure to act on
results - Poor documentation
- Prescribing issues (errors, interacting
medications)
27Alert 18 Risk assessment- findings contd.
- Poor communication across the interface
- Insufficient support for patients staff
- Insufficient monitoring
- Inadequate safety checks at repeat prescribing
28Alert 18 safer practice solutions
- Ensure competency of staff
- Ensure policies procedures in place
- Audit services
- Provide verbal and written information for
patients at commencement and thro treatment - Prescribers and pharmacists to supply repeat
prescriptions using safe systems of practice
only when safe to do so - Implement safety precautions when co-prescribing
interacting drugs - Standardise the range of products available to
avoid error
29Generic risks
- Lack of knowledge and expertise
- Poor communication between sectors
- Poor monitoring
- Poor patient information and education
- Inadequate documentation
- Lack of standardisation
30The challenges
- Loss of control or a sharing of responsibility?
- Increasing complexity
- - longer care pathway
- more stakeholders
- Different cultures (and politics)
- Longer chains of communication
- Different ways of working - re-designing the
system
31The challenges - contd.
- Policy changes to meet future system needs
(Community pharmacy services) - Resource transfers
- Providing information for patients
- On-going monitoring
- Inadequate/unreliable systems
32Potential solutions
- Technology
- Specialised design of e-prescription
- E-transfer of prescriptions
- Sharing of patient e-record (hospital, GP,
pharmacy) - On-line availability of protocol information
33Potential solutions
- Skills and competence
- Secondary sector expertise in primary care
- Consultant Oncology Pharmacists
- Pharmacist led monitoring clinics
- Enhanced role for specialist pharmacy technicians
34Summary
- The future presents both risk and opportunity
- Information is key
- Incident reporting
- Learning from incidents reactive
- Learning from others proactive
- Windows of opportunity for role enhancement
35