• Journal of critical care · Feb 2018

    The impact of a daily "medication time out" in the Intensive Care Unit.

    • Christopher R Tainter, Albert P Nguyen, Kimberly A Pollock, Edward O O'Brien, Jarone Lee, Ulrich Schmidt, Farivar Jahanasouz, Robert L Owens, and Angela Meier.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine and Department of Anesthesiology, Division of Critical Care, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA, United States.
    • J Crit Care. 2018 Feb 1; 43: 366-369.

    ObjectiveMedical errors play a large role in preventable harms within our health care system. Medications administered in the ICU can be numerous, complex and subject to daily changes. We describe a method to identify medication errors with the potential to improve patient safety.DesignA quality improvement intervention featuring a daily medication time out for each patient was performed during rounds.SettingA 12-bed Cardiac Surgical ICU at a single academic institution with approximately 180 beds.InterventionAfter each patient encounter, the current medication list for the patient was read aloud from the electronic medical record, and the team would determine if any were erroneous or missing. Medication changes were recorded and graded post-hoc according to perceived significance.ResultsThis intervention resulted in 285 medication changes in 347 patient encounters. 179 of the 347 encounters (51.6%) resulted in at least one change. Of the changes observed, 40.4% were categorized as trivial, 50.5% as minor and 9.1% were considered to have significant potential impact on patient care. The average time spent per patient for this intervention was 1.24 (SD 0.65) minutes.ConclusionsA daily medication time out should be considered as an additional mechanism for patient safety in the ICU.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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