Cargando…

A quality improvement project to increase self-administration of medicines in an acute hospital

QUALITY PROBLEM OR ISSUE: A patient survey found significantly fewer patients reported they had self-administered their medicines while in hospital (20% of 100 patients) than reported that they would like to (44% of 100). We aimed to make self-administration more easily available to patients who wan...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Garfield, S, Bell, H, Nathan, C, Randall, S, Husson, F, Boucher, C, Taylor, A, Lloyd, J, Backhouse, A, Ritchie, L, Franklin, B D
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6005068/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29590365
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzy035
_version_ 1783332636306964480
author Garfield, S
Bell, H
Nathan, C
Randall, S
Husson, F
Boucher, C
Taylor, A
Lloyd, J
Backhouse, A
Ritchie, L
Franklin, B D
author_facet Garfield, S
Bell, H
Nathan, C
Randall, S
Husson, F
Boucher, C
Taylor, A
Lloyd, J
Backhouse, A
Ritchie, L
Franklin, B D
author_sort Garfield, S
collection PubMed
description QUALITY PROBLEM OR ISSUE: A patient survey found significantly fewer patients reported they had self-administered their medicines while in hospital (20% of 100 patients) than reported that they would like to (44% of 100). We aimed to make self-administration more easily available to patients who wanted it. INITIAL ASSESSMENT: We conducted a failure, modes and effects analysis, collected baseline data on four wards and carried out observations. CHOICE OF SOLUTION: Our initial assessment suggested that the main areas we should focus on were raising patient awareness of self-administration, changing the patient assessment process and creating a storage solution for medicines being self-administered. We developed new patient information leaflets and posters and a doctor’s assessment form using Plan–Do–Study–Act cycles. We developed initial designs for a storage solution. IMPLEMENTATION: We piloted the new materials on three wards; the fourth withdrew due to staff shortages. EVALUATION: Following collection of baseline data, we continued to collect weekly data. We found that the proportion of patients who wished to self-administer who reported that they were able to do so, significantly increased from 41% (of 155 patients) to 66% (of 118 patients) during the study, despite a period when the hospital was over capacity. LESSONS LEARNED: Raising and maintaining healthcare professionals’ awareness of self-administration can greatly increase the proportion of patients who wish to self-administer who actually do so. Healthcare professionals prefer multi-disciplinary input into the assessment process.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6005068
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-60050682018-06-21 A quality improvement project to increase self-administration of medicines in an acute hospital Garfield, S Bell, H Nathan, C Randall, S Husson, F Boucher, C Taylor, A Lloyd, J Backhouse, A Ritchie, L Franklin, B D Int J Qual Health Care Quality in Practice QUALITY PROBLEM OR ISSUE: A patient survey found significantly fewer patients reported they had self-administered their medicines while in hospital (20% of 100 patients) than reported that they would like to (44% of 100). We aimed to make self-administration more easily available to patients who wanted it. INITIAL ASSESSMENT: We conducted a failure, modes and effects analysis, collected baseline data on four wards and carried out observations. CHOICE OF SOLUTION: Our initial assessment suggested that the main areas we should focus on were raising patient awareness of self-administration, changing the patient assessment process and creating a storage solution for medicines being self-administered. We developed new patient information leaflets and posters and a doctor’s assessment form using Plan–Do–Study–Act cycles. We developed initial designs for a storage solution. IMPLEMENTATION: We piloted the new materials on three wards; the fourth withdrew due to staff shortages. EVALUATION: Following collection of baseline data, we continued to collect weekly data. We found that the proportion of patients who wished to self-administer who reported that they were able to do so, significantly increased from 41% (of 155 patients) to 66% (of 118 patients) during the study, despite a period when the hospital was over capacity. LESSONS LEARNED: Raising and maintaining healthcare professionals’ awareness of self-administration can greatly increase the proportion of patients who wish to self-administer who actually do so. Healthcare professionals prefer multi-disciplinary input into the assessment process. Oxford University Press 2018-06 2018-03-24 /pmc/articles/PMC6005068/ /pubmed/29590365 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzy035 Text en © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press in association with the International Society for Quality in Health Care. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Quality in Practice
Garfield, S
Bell, H
Nathan, C
Randall, S
Husson, F
Boucher, C
Taylor, A
Lloyd, J
Backhouse, A
Ritchie, L
Franklin, B D
A quality improvement project to increase self-administration of medicines in an acute hospital
title A quality improvement project to increase self-administration of medicines in an acute hospital
title_full A quality improvement project to increase self-administration of medicines in an acute hospital
title_fullStr A quality improvement project to increase self-administration of medicines in an acute hospital
title_full_unstemmed A quality improvement project to increase self-administration of medicines in an acute hospital
title_short A quality improvement project to increase self-administration of medicines in an acute hospital
title_sort quality improvement project to increase self-administration of medicines in an acute hospital
topic Quality in Practice
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6005068/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29590365
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzy035
work_keys_str_mv AT garfields aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT bellh aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT nathanc aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT randalls aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT hussonf aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT boucherc aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT taylora aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT lloydj aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT backhousea aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT ritchiel aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT franklinbd aqualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT garfields qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT bellh qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT nathanc qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT randalls qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT hussonf qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT boucherc qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT taylora qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT lloydj qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT backhousea qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT ritchiel qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital
AT franklinbd qualityimprovementprojecttoincreaseselfadministrationofmedicinesinanacutehospital