Primary care provider perceptions and use of a novel medication reconciliation technology.

BACKGROUND Although medication reconciliation (MR) can reduce medication discrepancies, it is challenging to operationalise. Consequently, we developed a health information technology (HIT) to collect a patient medication history and make it available to the primary care (PC) provider. We deployed a self-service kiosk in a PC clinic that permits patients to indicate a medication adherence history. Patient responses are immediately viewable in the legacy electronic health record. This paper describes a survey developed to assess PC provider perceptions of our HIT and HIT implementation effectiveness. METHODS We developed and administered a survey to all PC providers to assess technology implementation effectiveness. The survey included scales measuring (1) user attitudes towards MR, (2) perceptions of our HIT and (3) the local organisational climate for implementation. We also assessed the consistency and quality of tool use. RESULTS Nearly 90% of PC providers responded to the survey and 58% indicated that they were familiar with the technology and had seen the tool output. Most providers believed that MR represented an important safety intervention, although 43% did not believe that they had the necessary resources to manage discrepancies. Composite scale scores for the 58% of respondents familiar with the HIT indicate that the majority favoured our tool over usual care. However, composite scale scores suggest that the climate for implementation at our facility was suboptimal. Overall, the quality and consistency of tool use among providers was very heterogeneous. CONCLUSIONS A patient self-service kiosk offers an efficient mechanism to collect a medication adherence history; provider survey responses indicate that they appreciated and used the MR kiosk output. Nonetheless, opportunities exist to improve data displays and embed decision support to facilitate discrepancy management.

[1]  M Fertleman,et al.  Improving medication management for patients: the effect of a pharmacist on post-admission ward rounds , 2005, Quality and Safety in Health Care.

[2]  P. Porcelli,et al.  A Review of Medication Reconciliation Issues and Experiences with Clinical Staff and Information Systems , 2010, Applied Clinical Informatics.

[3]  John F Hurdle,et al.  High rates of adverse drug events in a highly computerized hospital. , 2005, Archives of internal medicine.

[4]  L. G. Tornatzky,et al.  Innovation characteristics and innovation adoption-implementation: A meta-analysis of findings , 1982, IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management.

[5]  J. Krska,et al.  Pharmacist-led medication review in patients over 65: a randomized, controlled trial in primary care. , 2001, Age and ageing.

[6]  M. Levanda Implementing a medication reconciliation process in a community hospital. , 2007, American journal of health-system pharmacy : AJHP : official journal of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.

[7]  M. Kelly,et al.  Medication discrepancies in an outpatient electronic medical record. , 2001, American journal of health-system pharmacy : AJHP : official journal of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.

[8]  K. Klein,et al.  The Challenge of Innovation Implementation , 1996 .

[9]  Fred D. Davis,et al.  Extrinsic and Intrinsic Motivation to Use Computers in the Workplace1 , 1992 .

[10]  Blake J. Lesselroth,et al.  Implementation Brief: Design and Implementation of a Medication Reconciliation Kiosk: the Automated Patient History Intake Device (APHID) , 2009, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[11]  Peter Knapp,et al.  A questionnaire to measure health practitioners’ attitudes to partnership in medicine taking: LATCon II , 2009, Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy.

[12]  Gina Green,et al.  Gender Differences in Perceptions and Use of Communication Technologies: A Diffusion of Innovation Approach , 2005, Inf. Resour. Manag. J..

[13]  Jeffrey L. Greenwald,et al.  Results of a medication reconciliation survey from the 2006 Society of Hospital Medicine national meeting. , 2008, Journal of hospital medicine.

[14]  Julia Adler-Milstein,et al.  A Survey of Health Information Exchange Organizations in the United States: Implications for Meaningful Use , 2011, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[15]  D. Schillinger,et al.  A visual medication schedule to improve anticoagulation control: a randomized, controlled trial. , 2007, Joint Commission journal on quality and patient safety.

[16]  E. Etchells,et al.  Reconcilable differences: correcting medication errors at hospital admission and discharge , 2006, Quality and Safety in Health Care.

[17]  Izak Benbasat,et al.  Development of an Instrument to Measure the Perceptions of Adopting an Information Technology Innovation , 1991, Inf. Syst. Res..

[18]  J. Nebeker,et al.  Prescribing discrepancies likely to cause adverse drug events after patient transfer , 2009, Quality & Safety in Health Care.

[19]  P. Höglund,et al.  Improved quality in the hospital discharge summary reduces medication errors—LIMM: Landskrona Integrated Medicines Management , 2009, European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology.

[20]  Mark Vandenbosch,et al.  Research Report: Richness Versus Parsimony in Modeling Technology Adoption Decisions - Understanding Merchant Adoption of a Smart Card-Based Payment System , 2001, Inf. Syst. Res..

[21]  Blackford Middleton,et al.  Design and implementation of a web-based patient portal linked to an electronic health record designed to improve medication safety: the Patient Gateway medications module. , 2008, Informatics in primary care.

[22]  R. Straka,et al.  Patient Self‐Reporting of Compliance Does Not Correspond with Electronic Monitoring: An Evaluation Using Isosorbide Dinitrate as a Model Drug , 1997, Pharmacotherapy.

[23]  B L Lambert,et al.  Effect of orthographic and phonological similarity on false recognition of drug names. , 2001, Social science & medicine.

[24]  Elske Ammenwerth,et al.  BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making , 2022 .

[25]  W. Hogan,et al.  The accuracy of medication data in an outpatient electronic medical record. , 1996, Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA.

[26]  Blake J. Lesselroth,et al.  Using consumer-based kiosk technology to improve and standardize medication reconciliation in a specialty care setting. , 2009, Joint Commission journal on quality and patient safety.

[27]  E. Etchells,et al.  Unintended medication discrepancies at the time of hospital admission. , 2005, Archives of internal medicine.

[28]  Kaija Saranto,et al.  Electronic documentation in medication reconciliation - a challenge for health care professionals. , 2008, Applied nursing research : ANR.

[29]  Elihu Katz,et al.  Theorizing Diffusion: Tarde and Sorokin Revisited , 1999 .

[30]  David W. Bates,et al.  An effort to improve electronic health record medication list accuracy between visits: Patients' and physicians' response , 2008, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[31]  D. Baker,et al.  Results of the Medications At Transitions and Clinical Handoffs (MATCH) Study: An Analysis of Medication Reconciliation Errors and Risk Factors at Hospital Admission , 2010, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[32]  D. Bates,et al.  The Costs of Adverse Drug Events in Hospitalized Patients , 1997 .

[33]  L. Savitz,et al.  Evaluation of patient care interventions and recommendations by a transitional care pharmacist , 2007, Therapeutics and clinical risk management.

[34]  Zvi H. Aronson,et al.  Implementing computer technology: a multiorganizational test of Klein and Sorra’s model , 2004 .

[35]  D. Steinke,et al.  Impact of a Pharmacist on Medication Reconciliation on Patient Admission to a Veterans Affairs Medical Center , 2008 .

[36]  Detmar W. Straub,et al.  Information Technology Adoption Across Time: A Cross-Sectional Comparison of Pre-Adoption and Post-Adoption Beliefs , 1999, MIS Q..

[37]  S. Kimmel,et al.  Enhancement of medication recall using medication pictures and lists in telephone interviews , 2003, Pharmacoepidemiology and drug safety.

[38]  L. Leape,et al.  Reconciling medications at admission: safe practice recommendations and implementation strategies. , 2006, Joint Commission journal on quality and patient safety.

[39]  Ephraim R. McLean,et al.  The DeLone and McLean Model of Information Systems Success: A Ten-Year Update , 2003, J. Manag. Inf. Syst..

[40]  D. Bates,et al.  The future of health information technology in the patient-centered medical home. , 2010, Health affairs.

[41]  S D Small,et al.  The costs of adverse drug events in hospitalized patients. Adverse Drug Events Prevention Study Group. , 1998, JAMA.

[42]  J. Nebeker,et al.  Electronic health records and adverse drug events after patient transfer , 2010, Quality and Safety in Health Care.

[43]  O. Baron-Epel,et al.  What do discharged patients know about their medication? , 2005, Patient education and counseling.

[44]  Amy Buhl Conn,et al.  Implementing computerized technology: an organizational analysis. , 2001, The Journal of applied psychology.

[45]  Chandra Y. Osborn,et al.  Validation of an Organizational Communication Climate Assessment Toolkit , 2010, American journal of medical quality : the official journal of the American College of Medical Quality.

[46]  A. Siu,et al.  Medication reconciliation for reducing drug-discrepancy adverse events. , 2006, The American journal of geriatric pharmacotherapy.

[47]  E. Etchells,et al.  Frequency, type and clinical importance of medication history errors at admission to hospital: a systematic review , 2005, Canadian Medical Association Journal.

[48]  Mitchell J. Barnett,et al.  Assessing the accuracy of computerized medication histories. , 2004, The American journal of managed care.

[49]  Catherine L. Liang,et al.  Classifying and Predicting Errors of Inpatient Medication Reconciliation , 2008, Journal of General Internal Medicine.

[50]  A. Holbrook,et al.  Interventions to Improve Medication Reconciliation in Primary Care , 2009, The Annals of pharmacotherapy.

[51]  R. Chaudhry,et al.  Implementation of a medication reconciliation process in an ambulatory internal medicine clinic , 2007, Quality and Safety in Health Care.

[52]  Tejal K. Gandhi,et al.  Design and implementation of an application and associated services to support interdisciplinary medication reconciliation efforts at an integrated healthcare delivery network. , 2006, Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association : JAMIA.

[53]  M. Cantor,et al.  Implementing online medication reconciliation at a large academic medical center. , 2008, Joint Commission journal on quality and patient safety.

[54]  J. Hernández,et al.  Adverse drug events in ambulatory care. , 2003, The New England journal of medicine.

[55]  J. Schommer,et al.  Patients' knowledge of medication care plans after hospital discharge. , 1998, American journal of health-system pharmacy : AJHP : official journal of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.

[56]  Catherine L. Liang,et al.  Effect of an electronic medication reconciliation application and process redesign on potential adverse drug events: a cluster-randomized trial. , 2009, Archives of internal medicine.

[57]  Abha Agrawal,et al.  Evaluation of an Electronic Medication Reconciliation System in Inpatient Setting in an Acute Care Hospital , 2007, MedInfo.

[58]  Blake J. Lesselroth,et al.  Simulation Modeling of a Check-in and Medication Reconciliation Ambulatory Clinic Kiosk , 2011 .

[59]  F. Lau,et al.  Use of Information Technology in Medication Reconciliation: A Scoping Review , 2010, The Annals of pharmacotherapy.

[60]  Fred D. Davis Perceived Usefulness, Perceived Ease of Use, and User Acceptance of Information Technology , 1989, MIS Q..

[61]  Erin V. Lehman,et al.  Development of an Instrument , 2005 .

[62]  D. R. Dixon,et al.  The behavioral side of information technology , 1999, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[63]  R. Resar,et al.  Standardization as a mechanism to improve safety in health care. , 2004, Joint Commission journal on quality and safety.

[64]  R. Goldberg,et al.  Discrepancies in the use of medications: their extent and predictors in an outpatient practice. , 2000, Archives of internal medicine.