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Improving Allergy Status Documentation on Electronic Patient Records- a Trust-Wide In-Patient Quality Improvement Project

AIMS: NICE guideline CG183 states that “both the drug and the description of the reaction must be documented on all forms of prescription and in a patient's medical records”. Black Country Partnership NHS Foundation Trust (BCPNFT) documents allergy status on both paper drug charts and the Elect...

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Autores principales: Cook, Natalie, Prasanna, Aparna, Mathews, Rhea, Cabada, Josh, Hebbar, Meghnaa, Jaffar, Shakeel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10345644/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.261
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author Cook, Natalie
Prasanna, Aparna
Mathews, Rhea
Cabada, Josh
Hebbar, Meghnaa
Jaffar, Shakeel
author_facet Cook, Natalie
Prasanna, Aparna
Mathews, Rhea
Cabada, Josh
Hebbar, Meghnaa
Jaffar, Shakeel
author_sort Cook, Natalie
collection PubMed
description AIMS: NICE guideline CG183 states that “both the drug and the description of the reaction must be documented on all forms of prescription and in a patient's medical records”. Black Country Partnership NHS Foundation Trust (BCPNFT) documents allergy status on both paper drug charts and the Electronic Patient Record“"Ri”" (EPR). Incomplete Allergy Status on EPR poses a significant patient safety risk, particularly in an era of hybrid working and out of hours input from remotely based clinicians. The standard for this audit is that 100% of drug charts and Rio notes should have allergy status documented. The BCPNFT is a collection of psychiatric services across four towns- Dudley, Walsall, West Bromwich and Wolverhampton. The aim was to ensure consistent practice and standards across all sites. Following the initial data collection, discussion of findings and Action Plan (AP), and to ensure consistent standards, it was agreed to expand the project to include all General Adult in-patient units. METHODS: A data collection tool was designed collaboratively with the QI Department, to capture demographics, diagnosis, admission duration, legal status and allergy status both written and digital. This tool applied for all 96 older adult in-patients across the four localities within the trust on 03.10.22. The only exclusion criteria was admission within 24 hours of the data collection date. RESULTS: Data Collection: 100% of Paper Drug Charts had allergy status documented, only 70% have type or severity of allergic reaction documented. Despite 76% of in-patients admission of 4 weeks or longer, only 62% of patients had their allergy status documented on EPR, this varied from 30-100% across individual wards. EPR allergy status documented: Wolverhampton 93% West Bromwich 100% Dudley 33% Walsall 39% CONCLUSION: The results from all four localities were presented at the respective locality post graduate teaching, the EPR configuration team meeting and the QI Group meeting to gain Multi-Disciplinary Team feedback for both low documentation rates and high variability across sites. Based on this feedback, the AP comprised of incorporating an Allergy Status prompt into the electronic clerking document, visual prompts of stickers and posters across all wards. Also, liaising with Pharmacy to request they also update the allergy status on EPR; and Ward Matrons who have added an Allergy Status alert onto their bed state view. Data will then recollected post AP interventions, across all older and working age adult inpatient wards- a sample size of around 300 patients. The second data collection is currently being undertaken.
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spelling pubmed-103456442023-07-15 Improving Allergy Status Documentation on Electronic Patient Records- a Trust-Wide In-Patient Quality Improvement Project Cook, Natalie Prasanna, Aparna Mathews, Rhea Cabada, Josh Hebbar, Meghnaa Jaffar, Shakeel BJPsych Open Quality Improvement AIMS: NICE guideline CG183 states that “both the drug and the description of the reaction must be documented on all forms of prescription and in a patient's medical records”. Black Country Partnership NHS Foundation Trust (BCPNFT) documents allergy status on both paper drug charts and the Electronic Patient Record“"Ri”" (EPR). Incomplete Allergy Status on EPR poses a significant patient safety risk, particularly in an era of hybrid working and out of hours input from remotely based clinicians. The standard for this audit is that 100% of drug charts and Rio notes should have allergy status documented. The BCPNFT is a collection of psychiatric services across four towns- Dudley, Walsall, West Bromwich and Wolverhampton. The aim was to ensure consistent practice and standards across all sites. Following the initial data collection, discussion of findings and Action Plan (AP), and to ensure consistent standards, it was agreed to expand the project to include all General Adult in-patient units. METHODS: A data collection tool was designed collaboratively with the QI Department, to capture demographics, diagnosis, admission duration, legal status and allergy status both written and digital. This tool applied for all 96 older adult in-patients across the four localities within the trust on 03.10.22. The only exclusion criteria was admission within 24 hours of the data collection date. RESULTS: Data Collection: 100% of Paper Drug Charts had allergy status documented, only 70% have type or severity of allergic reaction documented. Despite 76% of in-patients admission of 4 weeks or longer, only 62% of patients had their allergy status documented on EPR, this varied from 30-100% across individual wards. EPR allergy status documented: Wolverhampton 93% West Bromwich 100% Dudley 33% Walsall 39% CONCLUSION: The results from all four localities were presented at the respective locality post graduate teaching, the EPR configuration team meeting and the QI Group meeting to gain Multi-Disciplinary Team feedback for both low documentation rates and high variability across sites. Based on this feedback, the AP comprised of incorporating an Allergy Status prompt into the electronic clerking document, visual prompts of stickers and posters across all wards. Also, liaising with Pharmacy to request they also update the allergy status on EPR; and Ward Matrons who have added an Allergy Status alert onto their bed state view. Data will then recollected post AP interventions, across all older and working age adult inpatient wards- a sample size of around 300 patients. The second data collection is currently being undertaken. Cambridge University Press 2023-07-07 /pmc/articles/PMC10345644/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.261 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. This does not need to be placed under each abstract, just each page is fine.
spellingShingle Quality Improvement
Cook, Natalie
Prasanna, Aparna
Mathews, Rhea
Cabada, Josh
Hebbar, Meghnaa
Jaffar, Shakeel
Improving Allergy Status Documentation on Electronic Patient Records- a Trust-Wide In-Patient Quality Improvement Project
title Improving Allergy Status Documentation on Electronic Patient Records- a Trust-Wide In-Patient Quality Improvement Project
title_full Improving Allergy Status Documentation on Electronic Patient Records- a Trust-Wide In-Patient Quality Improvement Project
title_fullStr Improving Allergy Status Documentation on Electronic Patient Records- a Trust-Wide In-Patient Quality Improvement Project
title_full_unstemmed Improving Allergy Status Documentation on Electronic Patient Records- a Trust-Wide In-Patient Quality Improvement Project
title_short Improving Allergy Status Documentation on Electronic Patient Records- a Trust-Wide In-Patient Quality Improvement Project
title_sort improving allergy status documentation on electronic patient records- a trust-wide in-patient quality improvement project
topic Quality Improvement
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10345644/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.261
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