• Am J Health Syst Pharm · Apr 2007

    Multidisciplinary approach to inpatient medication reconciliation in an academic setting.

    • Prathibha Varkey, Julie Cunningham, John O'Meara, Robert Bonacci, Nima Desai, and Robert Sheeler.
    • Division of Preventive and Occupational Medicine, Department of Pharmacy, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, MN 55905, and Department of Family Medicine, Park Nicollett Methodist Hospital, St Louis Park, USA. varkey.prathibha@mayo.edu
    • Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2007 Apr 15;64(8):850-4.

    PurposeThe effectiveness of a multidisciplinary medication reconciliation process was studied in an inpatient family medicine unit of an academic hospital center.MethodsIn phase 1 of this two-phase study, nurses, pharmacists, and physicians used an admission medication reconciliation form to reconcile patients' home medications on admission. The form was then reviewed by the pharmacist on the unit and by the attending physician, who reconciled the discharge medication list. The discharge medication list was compared against the patient's home medications list, inpatient medication profile, and prescriptions documented in the electronic medical record to investigate any medication discrepancies. Pharmacists participating in the study documented and categorized medication discrepancies by the potential severity of the error. In phase 2, family medicine medical residents and staff were instructed to include reconciled admission and discharge medication lists in the hospital summary.ResultsA total of 102 patients formed the study sample. There was no significant difference between phase 1 and phase 2 patients in mean age, sex, and length of hospital stay. Totals of 432 and 367 admission medications required reconciliation during phase 1 and phase 2, respectively. The mean number of admission medication discrepancies decreased from 0.5 per patient in phase 1 to 0 per patient in phase 2. The mean number of discharge medication discrepancies decreased from 3.3 per patient in phase 1 to 1.8 per patient in phase 2.ConclusionThe mean number of medication discrepancies occurring during admission and discharge decreased after a multidisciplinary medication reconciliation process was implemented in an inpatient family medicine unit of an academic hospital center.

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