Connie Lo, Sydney & South Western Sydney Local Health Districts: “But the system let me” -...

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Connie Lo, eMR Clinical Application Specialist, Sydney & South Western Sydney Local Health Districts, NSW delivered this presentation at the 2013 Electronic Medication Management conference. It is Australia’s only conference to look solely at electronic prescribing and electronic medication management systems. For more information on the annual event, please visit the conference website: http://www.healthcareconferences.com.au/emedmanagement

Transcript of Connie Lo, Sydney & South Western Sydney Local Health Districts: “But the system let me” -...

“But the System Let Me”

Review of eMMS Design Post-Implementation

Rosemary Richman eMR Project Manager

Connie LoeMR Clinical Application Specialist (PharmNet)

Information Management and Technology DivisionSydney and South Western Sydney LHDs

eMM Concord Hospital

� Background of eMM project

� Evolution of eMM Design

Background

� Scope limited to inpatients & to test fundamental eMM functionality

� Inpatient dispensing only & no integration with iPharmacy

� No order entry without allergy information

� Minimal clinical documentation – height, weight, pulse, BGL

� Trial different devices

� Limited decision support to assist clinicians

Background

� Integration Cerner Solutions

– Closed loop medication solution

� Electronic prescribing - PowerOrders

� Pharmacy review, verification & dispensing – PharmNet

� Charting Administration - MAR

� Drug database – Multum

� Customised Decision Support – Discern Rules

Rationale

� More benefits in electronic prescribing, basic decision support & medication administration

� Minimum decision support minimised system performance issues & delays to obtain agreement on rules

� Rationalisation of decision support for maximum patient safety: minimum workflow impact

� Eliminated patient safety risks associated with the paper NIMC

� Avoided high vendor & technical risks with pharmacy system integration

� Introduced in a manner easy for the management of issues & easy for staff to adopt

� Balance between benefits & processes

Rationale

� Decision to focus on Aged Care wards:

– Many medications & many requiring modification during admission

– No complex infusions

– No high risk ADRs

– Medical interest in prescribing, reflected in work practice

– Multidisciplinary practices in place

Initial eMM Design

� Early consultation across a range of users

� Good governance structure

� Clinical champions identified, committees established, & policies around

design & processes mapped to inform system design early in the project

� Design decisions were made by a series of committees

� Standard Cerner build

� Adhered to NSW Health recommendations

� Incorporated organisational, cultural & clinical practice changes

� Clinicians involved in decision making processes - concerns

acknowledged & addressed early on

� Advocacy & leadership by senior clinicians

� Clinicians facilitated communication between clinical & project staff

� Opportunities to change processes & practices

Design Features

� Early planning for workflow changes

� Aligned with safety features of NIMC

� Integrated with real time clinical data

� Decision support at point of prescribing

� TALLman letters for look alike sound alike pairs

� No order entry without allergy functionality

Design Features (continued)

� Reasons included in sentence for PRN medications

� Times adjusted to be appropriate for care e.g. Parkinsons

� Aligned missed doses abbreviations & codes to NIMC

� Remote access for after hours review by doctors

� Order sentences

– Based on drug references and Therapeutic Guidelines

� Order sets

– Consensus of best practice

Order Sentences

� Approximately 12000 order sentences (generics and brands)

Order Sets

� Order sets used to group corresponding orders together

– Patch & patch removal orders

– Warfarin & warfarin target range orders

Implementation

� Nov 2007 – Nov 2009 implemented in 5 Aged Care wards Concord Hospital (20% inpatients)

� Pilot identified several software limitations that restricted some basic functionality at a clinically acceptable Australian standard e.g. Continuous IV Infusion

� Some components such as reconciliation were not implemented due to the inadequacy of the current functionality

Initial Issues Post Go Live

� Prescribing errors subtle & difficult to spot immediately

� Selection Errors

� High doses

� Alert over rides

� Order modification

� No link between corresponding orders in order sets

� Potential for missed doses to go unnoticed

� Not all relevant information fitted on screen

� Difficulty to translate complex charts to electronic increased

risk of missed doses

� Transcribing errors

Initial Issues Post Go Live (continued)

� Perceived increase in workload

� Long process for medication reconciliation

� Security breeches e.g. not logging off

� Informing staff on non eMM wards

� Downtime & transfer processes

� Speciality medication charts

� Loss of staff knowledge

� Maintenance of current good work practices

� Demand on pharmacy increased significantly

Initial Issues Post Go Live (continued)

� Devices not charged, infection control, proximity, peak use access

� Double documentation

� Mostly minor bugs minimal time to rectify

� Some cumbersome workarounds

� Relief staff not able to use system

� Some training issues

Review of Go Live Issues

� Daily ward meetings to address issues as arose/give feedback

� Review of design in consultation with clinicians

� Immediate resolution of issues /rapid design changes

� Mostly minor bugs minimal time to rectify

� Areas of poor compliance or misinterpretation addressed quickly

� Ward/business issues managed by ward staff

� Changes to policies & procedures

� Change management & tweaking of processes/design e.g. warfarin

� After hours managers trained to respond to issues

� Rationalisation of decision support

� Audits – improve compliance or highlight problem areas

Evolution of System Design

� Tweaking initial design

– Update existing functionality

– Addition of medication safety features

� Developing custom rules

– Enforce workflows

– Provide decision support

– Address issues introduced by the system

� New functionality required from vendor

– IV fluids

– Medication reconciliation

Order Modification

� But the system let me ... change the route

� Prescribers could modify all order details including the route

resulting in some ambiguous medication orders

Order Modification

� Route is locked on order modification, prescribers have to

place a new order when changing the route

Warfarin

� But the system let me ... give the warfarin dose

� Administration prompts for warfarin dose dropped independently

of the INR check task

� Warfarin dose could be given prior to INR check task completion

Warfarin

� Five rules which evaluate warfarin/INR check parameters

(date/time, prescriber’s update instructions etc.)

� Control the availability of warfarin MAR task (for administration)

based on the INR check parameters

Paired Order Sets

� But the system let me ... just cancel warfarin/GTN patch

� Despite the grouping of the orders within an order set, orders

are not linked. Cancelling one order does not cancel the other.

Linked Cancellation for Paired Orders

� When one order within the order set is updated, rule checks

the status of corresponding order in the order set

� Corresponding order is updated with appropriate order action

where necessary

Paracetamol

� But the system let me ... order and give the Panadol

� Sometimes difficult to determine the cumulative daily dose of

paracetamol when multiple orders are prescribed

– Different routes, combination products, nurse initiated orders

Paracetamol – 24 Hour Cumulative Dose

� The cumulative doses of paracetamol within the last 24 hours

is checked upon paracetamol prescription and administration

� Prescribers receive pop-up alert at 3g/24 hours and 4g/24

hours upon placing a new order and administering a dose

Paracetamol – 24 Hour Cumulative Dose

First Dose of Antimicrobials

� But the system didn’t tell me ... the first dose starts tomorrow

� Daily frequency associated with default 8am administration time

� If ordered at 9am today � default start time 8am tomorrow

Default Antimicrobial Start Date/Time

� Start date/time for antimicrobial orders are checked and the

prescriber is alerted if the order starts the next day (after 12

midnight)

� Prescriber receives a pop-up alert to review and modify start

date/time as required

Default Antibiotic Start Date/Time

Building Medication Safety into eMM

� Mandatory Indication Documentation

� Patches

� Insulins

� Restricted Antimicrobials Prompt Upon Drug Selection

� Digoxin ADE Alerts

� IV Phenytoin Administration Alert

Mandatory Indication Documentation

GTN Patches

Fentanyl Patches

Insulins

Restricted Antimicrobial Prompts

� But the system let me ... select that order sentence

� By using an order sentence to provide information, prescribers

can inadvertently select it and place an order with this

information text

Restricted Antimicrobial Prompts

� Order sentence selection is checked to determine whether the

‘information only’ order sentence is selected

� Upon selection of the incorrect order sentence, prescriber

receives a pop-up alert to reselect correct order sentence

Potential digoxin Adverse Drug Events (ADEs)

� ISSUE: Administering digoxin when there are abnormal

potassium, magnesium and digoxin levels predisposes

patients to digoxin toxicity

� RULE: Checks for low potassium, low magnesium and high

digoxin levels upon order entry and checks when new

results are posted if there is an existing digoxin order

� ACTION: (New digoxin order)

– Pop-up alert to prescriber to review the use of digoxin

� ACTION: (Existing digoxin order)

– Messages are sent to attending doctor’s inbox and

pharmacists’ task list to review the use of digoxin

Digoxin Adverse Drug Events (ADEs)

Digoxin Adverse Drug Events (ADEs)

IV Phenytoin Administration

� ISSUE: Incidents with inappropriate administration of IV

phenytoin doses

� RULE: Checks whether phenytoin is prescriber as an IV

injection or IV infusion

� ACTION: Pop-up alert with LHD Policy on correct

administration procedure

Conclusion

� Continued process of implementation & evaluation

– Hospital wide rollout will identify new issues

– New functionality from code upgrades

� Development of decision support rules

– Increased clinical decision support

– Prioritisation of rule development

Questions?