Avoiding a Med-Wreck: a structured medication reconciliation framework and standardized auditing tool utilized to optimize patient safety and reallocate hospital resources
Abstract
Background: The incidence of preventable adverse drug events (ADE) is approximately one medication error per
patient per hospital-day. A quality medication reconciliation (MedRec) process is a crucial intervention used to reduce
ADE in the hospital and community setting. Amid the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, preventing
medication errors is vital to avoid patient readmission, reduce disease complications, and reduce cost and patient
burden on the healthcare system.
Objectives: To develop a standardized MedRec framework that can be implemented in all healthcare settings to
reduce patient and staf harm during COVID-19. Also, to create a standardized auditing tool used to assess the quality
of the MedRec process and allow for continuous quality improvement.
Methods: A multi-site gap analysis (MGA) was performed to collect observational data that were collected from four
diferent healthcare sites (two hospitals, a long-term care facility, and a community pharmacy). MGA consists of collecting data across several sites which answer a standardized questionnaire. A standardized MedRec framework and
auditing tool were developed based on the gaps observed in each site and literature reviews.
Results: A standardized MedRec process was not implemented in any of the observed sites. The healthcare sites
lacked a designated MedRec team and training related to the MedRec process leading to multiple discrepancies at
discharge. Patients were not counselled on changes to home medications, and a discharge report was often not
provided upon discharge. Communication mechanisms between community pharmacies and hospital physicians are
not available or easily accessible.
Conclusion: The proposed structured MedRec framework is vital to reduce medication errors and patient harm amid
COVID-19. Moreover, the comprehensive auditing tool developed in this study allows for continuous quality improvement resulting in superior quality care, reduction of workfow inefciencies, cost savings on hospital readmissions,
and overall enhanced healthcare system performance.