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Comparative evaluation of different medication safety measures for the emergency department: physicians’ usage and acceptance of training, poster, checklist and computerized decision support

BACKGROUND: Although usage and acceptance are important factors for a successful implementation of clinical decision support systems for medication, most studies only concentrate on their design and outcome. Our objective was to comparatively investigate a set of traditional medication safety measur...

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Autores principales: Sedlmayr, Brita, Patapovas, Andrius, Kirchner, Melanie, Sonst, Anja, Müller, Fabian, Pfistermeister, Barbara, Plank-Kiegele, Bettina, Vogler, Renate, Criegee-Rieck, Manfred, Prokosch, Hans-Ulrich, Dormann, Harald, Maas, Renke, Bürkle, Thomas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3733614/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23890121
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-13-79
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author Sedlmayr, Brita
Patapovas, Andrius
Kirchner, Melanie
Sonst, Anja
Müller, Fabian
Pfistermeister, Barbara
Plank-Kiegele, Bettina
Vogler, Renate
Criegee-Rieck, Manfred
Prokosch, Hans-Ulrich
Dormann, Harald
Maas, Renke
Bürkle, Thomas
author_facet Sedlmayr, Brita
Patapovas, Andrius
Kirchner, Melanie
Sonst, Anja
Müller, Fabian
Pfistermeister, Barbara
Plank-Kiegele, Bettina
Vogler, Renate
Criegee-Rieck, Manfred
Prokosch, Hans-Ulrich
Dormann, Harald
Maas, Renke
Bürkle, Thomas
author_sort Sedlmayr, Brita
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Although usage and acceptance are important factors for a successful implementation of clinical decision support systems for medication, most studies only concentrate on their design and outcome. Our objective was to comparatively investigate a set of traditional medication safety measures such as medication safety training for physicians, paper-based posters and checklists concerning potential medication problems versus the additional benefit of a computer-assisted medication check. We concentrated on usage, acceptance and suitability of such interventions in a busy emergency department (ED) of a 749 bed acute tertiary care hospital. METHODS: A retrospective, qualitative evaluation study was conducted using a field observation and a questionnaire-based survey. Six physicians were observed while treating 20 patient cases; the questionnaire, based on the Technology Acceptance Model 2 (TAM2), has been answered by nine ED physicians. RESULTS: During field observations, we did not observe direct use of any of the implemented interventions for medication safety (paper-based and electronic). Questionnaire results indicated that the electronic medication safety check was the most frequently used intervention, followed by checklist and posters. However, despite their positive attitude, physicians most often stated that they use the interventions in only up to ten percent for subjectively “critical” orders. Main reasons behind the low usage were deficits in ease-of-use and fit to the workflow. The intention to use the interventions was rather high after overcoming these barriers. CONCLUSIONS: Methodologically, the study contributes to Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) research in an ED setting and confirms TAM2 as a helpful diagnostic tool in identifying barriers for a successful implementation of medication safety interventions. In our case, identified barriers explaining the low utilization of the implemented medication safety interventions - despite their positive reception - include deficits in accessibility, briefing for the physicians about the interventions, ease-of-use and compatibility to the working environment.
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spelling pubmed-37336142013-08-06 Comparative evaluation of different medication safety measures for the emergency department: physicians’ usage and acceptance of training, poster, checklist and computerized decision support Sedlmayr, Brita Patapovas, Andrius Kirchner, Melanie Sonst, Anja Müller, Fabian Pfistermeister, Barbara Plank-Kiegele, Bettina Vogler, Renate Criegee-Rieck, Manfred Prokosch, Hans-Ulrich Dormann, Harald Maas, Renke Bürkle, Thomas BMC Med Inform Decis Mak Research Article BACKGROUND: Although usage and acceptance are important factors for a successful implementation of clinical decision support systems for medication, most studies only concentrate on their design and outcome. Our objective was to comparatively investigate a set of traditional medication safety measures such as medication safety training for physicians, paper-based posters and checklists concerning potential medication problems versus the additional benefit of a computer-assisted medication check. We concentrated on usage, acceptance and suitability of such interventions in a busy emergency department (ED) of a 749 bed acute tertiary care hospital. METHODS: A retrospective, qualitative evaluation study was conducted using a field observation and a questionnaire-based survey. Six physicians were observed while treating 20 patient cases; the questionnaire, based on the Technology Acceptance Model 2 (TAM2), has been answered by nine ED physicians. RESULTS: During field observations, we did not observe direct use of any of the implemented interventions for medication safety (paper-based and electronic). Questionnaire results indicated that the electronic medication safety check was the most frequently used intervention, followed by checklist and posters. However, despite their positive attitude, physicians most often stated that they use the interventions in only up to ten percent for subjectively “critical” orders. Main reasons behind the low usage were deficits in ease-of-use and fit to the workflow. The intention to use the interventions was rather high after overcoming these barriers. CONCLUSIONS: Methodologically, the study contributes to Technology Acceptance Model (TAM) research in an ED setting and confirms TAM2 as a helpful diagnostic tool in identifying barriers for a successful implementation of medication safety interventions. In our case, identified barriers explaining the low utilization of the implemented medication safety interventions - despite their positive reception - include deficits in accessibility, briefing for the physicians about the interventions, ease-of-use and compatibility to the working environment. BioMed Central 2013-07-29 /pmc/articles/PMC3733614/ /pubmed/23890121 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-13-79 Text en Copyright © 2013 Sedlmayr et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sedlmayr, Brita
Patapovas, Andrius
Kirchner, Melanie
Sonst, Anja
Müller, Fabian
Pfistermeister, Barbara
Plank-Kiegele, Bettina
Vogler, Renate
Criegee-Rieck, Manfred
Prokosch, Hans-Ulrich
Dormann, Harald
Maas, Renke
Bürkle, Thomas
Comparative evaluation of different medication safety measures for the emergency department: physicians’ usage and acceptance of training, poster, checklist and computerized decision support
title Comparative evaluation of different medication safety measures for the emergency department: physicians’ usage and acceptance of training, poster, checklist and computerized decision support
title_full Comparative evaluation of different medication safety measures for the emergency department: physicians’ usage and acceptance of training, poster, checklist and computerized decision support
title_fullStr Comparative evaluation of different medication safety measures for the emergency department: physicians’ usage and acceptance of training, poster, checklist and computerized decision support
title_full_unstemmed Comparative evaluation of different medication safety measures for the emergency department: physicians’ usage and acceptance of training, poster, checklist and computerized decision support
title_short Comparative evaluation of different medication safety measures for the emergency department: physicians’ usage and acceptance of training, poster, checklist and computerized decision support
title_sort comparative evaluation of different medication safety measures for the emergency department: physicians’ usage and acceptance of training, poster, checklist and computerized decision support
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3733614/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23890121
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1472-6947-13-79
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