HHE Emergency and critical care 2019 | Page 19

typically are older, and are at higher risk of both medical and traumatic injuries. Deterioration within the ED A total of 62.6% APM doses were missed within the ED with no clinical reasoning, which demonstrates extremely poor compliance with internal guidance on continuation of time-critical medications, as well as national guidance. 7 This figure is consistent with a similar previous study, 17 which found a 74.6% dose omission rate at another acute hospital Trust, indicating the problem may not be isolated to individual EDs and may be explained by systems failures. This may be due to compounding factors in the ED such as time pressure, overcrowding, lack of awareness of missed APMs and other priorities set by clinicians focusing on treatment of the presenting complaint – rather than maintenance of chronic therapies. As previously discussed, 18-20 APM omissions can be associated with potentially rapid and severe deterioration in symptoms. These are of particular concern in secondary care owing to development of dysphagia, potentially leading to aspiration, and mobility reduction increasing the likelihood of falls. Of the cases reviewed, clear documentation was found in ten cases (11.2%) where omissions may have lead to clinically significant deterioration of symptoms. These situations occurred exclusively in patients who did not have pharmacist review. Decisions to admit may have been influenced by these deteriorations in conjunction with pathogenic disease, and caused extensions in inpatient stay as a result. Impact of the pharmacist in the ED Pharmacist intervention occurred in 21.3% of the cases examined. This figure could be expected considering the level of service provision, which equates to 37.5 hours per working week, and that pharmacist responsibilities would have also extended to other high-risk patients. Pharmacists’ skill sets are well suited for this particular role, and would likely be superior to either a nurse- or medic-led approach to identifying and prioritising PD patients, due to innate knowledge of dosing schedules, formulation substitutions and rapid sourcing and supply. Pharmacist intervention was associated with statistically significant reduction in dose omissions while in the ED and within the first 24 hours of inpatient admission. The effect within the ED can be explained by pharmacists identifying patients as high-risk at an early stage, having APMs prescribed and supplied and implementing treatment plans while in the ED. Thus, prescribing, supply and administration of APMs are all accelerated. This approach has a completely different prioritisation strategy to typical ED processes. The effect was not expected to be as profound at a ward level; however, data clearly demonstrate dramatic reductions in dose omissions after transfer from ED to base ward. This effect at base ward level is potentially explained by the improved handover and continuity of care that a pharmacist can provide in regards to medication supply and documentation of checked medication regimes. It was also noted from the results that a FIGURE 9 Co-morbidities and total length of inpatient stay* >5 3–4 1–2 *Excludes patients who died as inpatients 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 <7 Days <1 month >=1 month >5 24 16 4 3-4 13 110 4 1-2 7 5 2 FIGURE 10 Age and total length of stay* >70 70–80 years >80 years *Excludes patients who died as inpatients 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 >=1 month <7 Days <1 month >70 9 1 70-80 years 11 13 3 >80 years 24 17 7 reduction in dose omissions (although not statistically significant) was observed in patients who had regular APMs prescribed within ED against those who did not. Patients might experience extended base ward waits prior to medical clerking which, when combined with omission in the ED, can lead to considerable proportions of time before normal medication can be reconciled and given. It was, however, important to note that pharmacist intervention was unable to eliminate dose omissions. This is likely explained by pharmacists identifying patients once doses had already been missed in the department, and relying on nurse administration of medications by prompting rather than administering themselves. These data indicate a tangible benefit in patient care and a clear prevention of deterioration within the department facilitated by early pharmacist intervention. These included two cases where patients attended the ED unable to resume oral therapies due to acute illness, where pharmacists rapidly recommended 19 HHE 2019 | hospitalhealthcare.com