
The Safe Medication Management Programme (SMM) will look at the processes undertaken in prescribing, dispensing, administering and reviewing medications for patients/consumers and the information available to clinicians to support these processes.
The programme will then work with the health and disability sector to develop an electronic system for medication information transfer and decision support for clinicians. These systems will result in improvements to medication management across the health and disability sector and improve patient safety by reducing adverse drug events.
While the programme will initially focus on hospitals and their interface with primary care, it will also develop systems to allow the programme to extend across the entire sector.
Potential adverse drug events can occur throughout the health and disability sector at any time when medications are prescribed, dispensed or administered to a patient/consumer.
People are most at risk from adverse drug events at any time when information about that person is transferred from one part of the health and disability sector to another or at any time information is passed within a primary or secondary health care setting.
For example, adverse drug events can occur when:
In a primary setting, a general practitioner issues a prescription, which is taken by the patient to the pharmacy and an mistake occurs when it is entered in the pharmacy's system for dispensing.
In a secondary setting, when a clinician prescribes medicine for a patient and the prescription is incorrectly hand written on a medication chart.
Staff involved in every part of the medicine process work hard to ensure patients are safe and well looked after while they are in their care. But sometimes errors can and do occur.
Patients may be harmed when:
Currently there are a number of electronic and paper systems involving medicines in use across the health and disability sector. All have the goal of ensuring the right medicine at the right dose is administered to the right patient/consumer, by the right route and at the right time.
The Safe Medication Management Programme (SMM) has been put in place to help clinicians reduce these events and the ensuing impact on patients/consumers.
For the SMM Programme to be successful, we need the support of the entire health and disability sector including governance, management, clinicians and IT staff.
If you would like to be actively engaged in the programme please contact us.
A number of outcomes have been identified as necessary to reduce patient/consumer harm through adverse drug events. Multi-disciplinary working groups established members from across the 21 DHBs have been put together to develop processes to deliver these outcomes.
The Working Groups are developing standards and processes for:
Medication charting standards will ensure consistency for prescribing and administering medicines. A standardised paper national medication chart will be developed from these medication charting standards and used across NZ to ensure their is a national consistent approach in line with best practice. This will form the foundation for developing electronic prescribing and adminstration system.
Standardised hospital medicine information systems will provide support and ensure consistency with e-prescribing and adminsitration, bedside verification and medicine reconciliation. The system will be linked to bring together all the information from the medication systems to ensure there is consistent messaging for prescribing, dispensing, administering and reviewing of medications for patients/consumers. The system will have the capability to link to community systems.
Unit dose packaging and electronically identifying medicines (for instance by bar coding) will provide a safer way to ensure that patients receive the prescribed medicine at the prescribed dose. Bedside verification will electronically identify the intended administrator of the medicine, the medicine itself and the patient.
Medicine reconciliation (MR) is an evidence-based process which has been demonstrated to significantly reduce medication errors that occur at transition points of care (admission, transfer and discharge). The process is able to produce a sustained reduction in discrepancies relating to medicine information that have the potential to become medication errors or result in medication related harm to the patient.
The goal for medicine reconciliation is to complete the MR process for all patients at each transition point (within 24 hours of admission and transfer and discharge) within and from secondary care.
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