Www.england.nhs.uk Safer Medication & Medical Devices Medication Safety & Hospital Admissions Avoidance 30 th June 2015 Dr Ahmed Ameer Medication Safety.

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Presentation transcript:

Safer Medication & Medical Devices Medication Safety & Hospital Admissions Avoidance 30 th June 2015 Dr Ahmed Ameer Medication Safety Officer

Outline for Session How big is the issue? Is the situation getting better or worse? Medication Review taken seriously enough? What should we all be doing about it?

Important academic references 11.2% patients had adverse drug events (ADEs) causing hospital admission (47.6% preventable) Patient age, time since starting new medicine and total number of medicines independently predictors of admission Antiplatelets, anticoagulants, diuretics, ACE inhibitors and anti – epileptics major culprits Kongkaew, C., Hann, M., Mandal, J., Williams, SD, Metcalfe, D., Noyce, P. & Ashcroft, D. Risk Factors for Hospital Admissions Associated with Adverse Drug Events. Pharmacotherapy 2013; 33:

Important academic references 6.5% UK hospital patients admitted due to Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) (72% preventable) Pirmohamed et al BMJ 2004;329:15-19 Preventable drug related problems accounted for 3.7% of hospital admissions. Antiplatelets, Diuretics, NSAID’s accounted for 50% of all admissions Howard et al BJCP 2007;63: % patients readmitted to hospital due to ADR within 1 year of first admission. Diuretics & Antiplatelets most frequent culprits Davies EC et al BJCP 2010;70:749-55

BUT under recognised because under reported ? International Classification of Disease (ICD) coding from hospital databases are not reliable for identifying ADRs Hohl CM,Karpov A, Reddekopp Let al. ICD-10 codes used to identify adverse drug events in administrative data: a systematic review J Am Med Inform Assoc 2014;21:547–557 Only 9% of adult patients admitted to a UK hospital with a confirmed medication related harm (ADRs, medication errors, non-adherence) had a related ICD code docume nted. Reynolds M et al. A descriptive exploratory study of how admissions caused by medication-related harm are documented within inpatients’ medical records. BMC Health Service Research 2014; 14: 257 Hohl CM,Karpov A, Reddekopp Let al. ICD-10 codes used to identify adverse drug events in administrative data: a systematic review J Am Med Inform Assoc 2014;21:547–557

BUT under recognised because under reported ? (2) 31.5% of children admitted to a UK hospital with a confirmed ADR had a related ICD code documented Bellis et al. BMC Pharmacology and Toxicology 2014, 15:72. Clinical coding of prospectively identified paediatric adverse drug reactions – a retrospective review of patient records

And the situation is only getting (and will get even) worse

Polypharmacy meets Multi-morbidity

Medication Reviews

And there are plenty of tools to help NICE Medicines Optimisation guidance Kings Fund, Scottish and Welsh Polypharmacy documents (CPPE focus too 2016) Seven steps to managing polypharmacy: Specialist pharmacy Services document Reducing Inappropriate Polypharmacy: The Process of Deprescribing Scott IA et al JAMA Intern Med doi: /jamainternmed STOPP START Gallagher P et al Int J Clin Pharmacol Thera 2008;46:72-83 No Tears Using the NO TEARS tool for medication review. T Lewis. BMJ 2004;329:434

Medication Review taken seriously enough? Can we compare it with a routine Total Knee Replacement (TKR) ?

Total Knee Replacement Preoperatively (50 mins) Preop assessment clinic (30 minutes Nurse + 20 minutes Doctor) Tests: ECG, bloods, and MRSA swabs Consent form Day of Surgery (150mins) Anaesthetic pre-op assessment (10 min) Anaesthesia-spinal or GA (20 min) Anaesthetist plus ODP or nurse Surgery (90mins) 2 scrub nurses, 2 surgeons,1 anaesthetist, 1 runner

Total Knee Replacement (2) Post operatively Recovery (60 mins) 1 Anaesthetic nurse 3-4 days on ward, OT and PT twice a day Post discharge Continue physiotherapy for several weeks individually in a group depending on the patients needs Follow up clinic appt with doctor

A typical Medication Review? 1 GP/Pharmacist (10 mins)

So what could the NHS be doing about it ?

Thomas J. A multidisciplinary approach to reducing avoidable medication-related harm/hospital admissions. Clinical Leadership Conference

2020: NHSE Medicines Optimisation Dashboard to include Medication related admissions per CCG ?

2020: Patient Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs )for Medication Review ?

But finally what could YOU be doing about it ?

Is balancing the Prescription Equation your key to medication related admissions avoidance? “If we just keep adding, and not subtracting, we just multiply the medication problems”

Thank you for listening Get in touch Ahmed Ameer

NPC guide to medication review 2008

Important References