Quote Of The Year

Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

or

H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Sunday, May 08, 2011

Medication Management is Put Under the Microscope and Looks Good - But More Work to Do!

The following appeared a week or so ago and really deserves a blog all to itself.

http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/tp/medmgttp.htm

Medication Management & Health IT

Full Title: Enabling Medication Management Through Health Information Technology (Health IT)

April 2011

View or download Report

Structured Abstract

Objective: The objective of the report was to review the evidence on the impact of health information technology (IT) on all phases of the medication management process (prescribing and ordering, order communication, dispensing, administration and monitoring as well as education and reconciliation), to identify the gaps in the literature and to make recommendations for future research.

Data sources: We searched peer-reviewed electronic databases, grey literature, and performed hand searches. Databases searched included MEDLINE®, Embase, CINAHL (Cumulated Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature), Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, International Pharmaceutical Abstracts, Compendex, Inspec (which includes IEEE Xplore), Library and Information Science Abstracts, E-Prints in Library and Information Science, PsycINFO, Sociological Abstracts, and Business Source Complete. Grey literature searching involved Internet searching, reviewing relevant Web sites, and searching electronic databases of grey literatures. AHRQ also provided all references in their e-Prescribing, bar coding, and CPOE knowledge libraries.

Methods: Paired reviewers looked at citations to identify studies on a range of health IT used to assist in the medication management process (MMIT) during multiple levels of screening (titles and abstracts, full text and final review for assignment of questions and data abstrction). Randomized controlled trials and cohort, case-control, and case series studies were independently assessed for quality. All data were abstracted by one reviewer and examined by one of two different reviewers with content and methods expertise.

Results: 40,582 articles were retrieved. After duplicates were removed, 32,785 articles were screened at the title and abstract phase. 4,578 full text articles were assessed and 789 articles were included in the final report. Of these, 361 met only content criteria and were listed without further abstraction. The final report included data from 428 articles across the seven key questions. Study quality varied according to phase of medication management. Substantially more studies, and studies with stronger comparative methods, evaluated prescribing and monitoring. Clinical decision support systems (CDSS) and computerized provider order entry (CPOE) systems were studied more than any other application of MMIT. Physicians were more often the subject of evaluation than other participants. Other health care professionals, patients, and families are important but not studied as thoroughly as physicians. These nonphysicians groups often value different aspects of MMIT, have diverse needs, and use systems differently. Hospitals and ambulatory clinics were well-represented in the literature with less emphasis placed on long-term care facilities, communities, homes, and nonhospital pharmacies. Most studies evaluated changes in process and outcomes of use, usability, and knowledge, skills, and attitudes. Most showed moderate to substantial improvement with implementation of MMIT. Economics studies and those with clinical outcomes were less frequently studied. Those articles that did address economics and clinical outcomes often showed equivocal findings on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of MMIT systems. Qualitative studies provided evidence of strong perceptions, both positive and negative, of the effects of MMIT and unintended consequences. We found little data on the effects of forms of medications, conformity, standards, and open source status. Much descriptive literature discusses implementation issues but little strong evidence exists. Interest is strong in MMIT and more groups and institutions will implement systems in the next decades, especially with the Federal Government's push toward more health IT to support better and more cost-effective health care.

Conclusions: MMIT is well-studied, although on closer examination of the literature the evidence is not uniform across phases of medication management, groups of people involved, or types of MMIT. MMIT holds the promise of improved processes; clinical and economics studies and the understanding of sustainability issues are lacking.

Download Report

Enabling Medication Management Through Health Information Technology (Health IT)

Evidence-based Practice Center: McMaster University

Current as of April 2011

Internet Citation:

Enabling Medication Management Through Health Information Technology (Health IT), Structured Abstract. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/tp/medmgttp.htm

----- End Abstract.

On the web site there is a much longer Executive Summary and then a really huge paper reviewing the information that was assessed.

To me this is a very important piece of work that does two key things. First it makes it clear that intervention with clinicians using interactive decision support does appear to make a positive difference and as such should be adopted as a priority - Not that the idiots at NEHTA and DoHA have got the message with Clinical Decision Support being dismissed in one paragraph (Paragraph 2.8.1) in the PCEHR Conops saying the PCEHR will not provide it and it is hoped someone else will!

This is just more evidence of how disconnected from the evidence the present PCEHR proposal in its present form is.

Second it lays out a large array of areas that still need further clarification and investigation. It seems to me the most important it to once and for all nail that using these systems actually not only reduces errors - which we know - but overall provides improved clinical outcomes in the broader sense - which we a pretty sure of but do not have the full picture clarified as yet.

Obviously the economic, financial and sustainability issues are also well worth sorting out.

I would hope to see an update from the EPC at McMaster University every couple of years, or so, and would hope the present issues will be fully clarified over time.

Well worth a download and careful review.

David.

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