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Can IT cut medication errors?

Published: January 17, 2008

By LOIS BAKER
Contributing Editor

Medication errors are one of the most serious problems occurring in doctors’ offices and outpatient clinics, and older persons with chronic conditions are the most vulnerable.

An experimental information technology intervention designed to help reduce such errors, developed by Gurdev Singh, director of UB’s Patient Safety Research Center, will begin this spring in eight ambulatory medical offices throughout Western New York.

The study is funded by a $1.2 million, 3-year grant from the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. The patient safety center is part of the Family Medicine Research Institute in the Department of Family Medicine in the School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.

Physicians and office staff in the eight sites will be assigned randomly to conduct “business-as-usual” or to implement an IT-based team resource management tool embedded in the ACORN office quality management system developed by Dendress Corp. of Buffalo, in collaboration with the center.

Singh, the study’s principal investigator, developed the study in consultation with his research team and Upstate New York Practice Based Research Network clinicians who already are using electronic medical records and were interested in identifying useful and affordable error-reducing approaches for their offices.

Outcome assessment will be based on medication safety among geriatric patients and on office staff use of the IT-based tool.

The study will focus on patients 65 or older who are being treated for cardiovascular disease. The first aim will be to determine the impact of the intervention on reducing injuries such as falls or internal bleeding resulting from the use of a drug. Data will be gathered by reviewing patients’ records obtained at baseline and at 12 months post-baseline.

Secondly, the study team will assess physicians’ compliance with recommended laboratory testing of patients taking specific cardiac medications: ACE inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) for controlling blood pressure, treating heart failure and preventing kidney damage in people with hypertension or diabetes; diuretics; digoxin, a drug used to treat congestive heart failure and certain heartbeat irregularities; and statins for lowering cholesterol.

The chart review for this outcome measure will include recording whether the medication was prescribed (for at least six months during the preceding 12 months), whether the recommended lab test was ordered (at least once during the measurement year) and whether the lab results were recorded in the patient’s chart.

The final aim of the study will be to determine if the IT tool is practical in a primary-care office setting and if it is embraced by office staff.

This demonstration project will provide pilot data for a larger study on the usefulness of the specific IT software.