Safety Culture in Pharmacy

From Pharmacy Times: Safety Culture in Pharmacy

I have never met a pharmacist who intentionally set out to make an error. Most pharmacists are detail-oriented individuals who take their roles seriously.
 
After all, pharmacists are the umpires of the health care game. They enter, verify, and triple check prescriptions, orders, and final products until they are satisfied.
 
Pharmacists make sure that the correct medication is going to the correct patient. I signed up for this when I applied to pharmacy school in 1993.
 
At the time, I didn’t know what I was signing up for except a nice salary. I had no idea about the culture of safety in many medical jobs, or that a career in pharmacy required perfectionism.

Fate would have it that I married a man in safety, as well. While he reduces on-the-job accidents along with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and other safety organizations, I work in a hospital where helping patients become well is the goal.
 
Nevertheless, the Journal of Patient Safety estimates that more than 400,000 people die each year due to harm in the hospital, making it the fourth leading cause of death in the United States. If this were any other industry, the organization would be shut down until the cause of harm was fixed, but hospitals simultaneously save lives, and so they stay open.

Hospitals have cultures that blame people rather than processes. Blaming people reduces error reporting, which shuts down improvement in processes.
 
Health care needs to view all errors as opportunities to improve systems and processes to catch mistakes caused by human error. Keep in mind that humans build processes, as well.
 
But will blaming people instead of processes ever change?

I asked a pharmacist once why he didn’t report errors. He told me that he only reports the errors that matter.
 
Don’t they all matter, though? Choosing and picking which error to report is looking through a punitive lens rather than a process lens.

I try to make it my practice to report all errors, even my own, because it is the only way to shed light on things that need to be adjusted in the system. If there are duplications missed regularly and a trend develops, the system analysts can figure out how to adjust the alerts to be better.
 
Changing how pharmacists check for errors could help, but if we don’t report, then they don’t know. In the meantime, we shouldn’t pick and choose what we report.

In the automotive industry, safety falls under human resources. Many times, an employee safety group is developed to look at the issues affecting the company.
 
Hospitals should employ the same type of safety group that not only encompasses risk management, information technology, and nursing, but also includes actual clinicians who work with the systems and interact with patients and their orders.
 
There should be multiple pathways provided for employees to bring suggestions and concerns to the group to look at the system and make it better, rather than just reporting errors with no follow-up and breaking down the processes that lead to a particular mishap.

We have processes and rules in place to make hospitals safer, but the culture can be so tainted that no one follows the protocols that are in place. It is true that when you start looking at safety through the lens of culture, you see how challenging it is to change.
 
Safety culture starts at the highest level of an organization and trickles down. If management does not have safety as a priority, then I guarantee you that no one else will.

One of the most damaging messages a pharmacist can receive is leadership mishandling a medical error. If our leaders do not take the time to investigate the systems involved with the error and how the error happened, and instead rush to punitive action toward the clinician, then staff members will become more jaded and less involved.
 
Medical errors are almost always the result of systematic flaws, rather than a person’s incompetence. Rushing to judgment rarely improves safety culture in a hospital and turns clinicians into something worse.

Here’s what a culture of safety in the pharmacy would look like:

Order entry and verification would not be in an area where distractions are abundant. There would be a telephone, but mainly for outbound calls. Order entry/verification would be in a quieter environment separate from where phones are ringing. Why host tasks that require perfection in an area that isn’t conducive to patient safety? If the room isn’t separate, then there will be constant interruptions. Every interruption, while pharmacists are in the middle of doing their job, is a recipe for disaster, just as it is for a nurse on the floor.


There would be continuity of care with work assignments. If pharmacists or nurses are changing hospitals every day, then they never really learn their patients. Processes could also vary from one hospital to another, which can lead to confusion for the clinician. If a pharmacist regularly works in the same environment, then he or she can see what processes need to change to ensure patient safety. Relationships between nursing and physicians would improve due to continuity of care. 


Nurses and pharmacists would report every single error, no matter how small. Only situations where there was blatant disregard of policy or unsafe acts would be punitive. If there is a near miss, then praise, where the error was discovered prior to the patient receiving the wrong care, would be given. The system should be designed to catch errors at different levels, rather than to rely on one step of the process. 
A safety focus group would be set up where issues and processes are analyzed on a routine basis, and changes are evaluated based on these analyzes. This focus group in the pharmacy could report to a larger group in the hospital with each department represented if a particular issue affects other departments.

More: Hospitals Mess Up Medications in Surgery A Lot - Bloomberg Business October 2015

Pharmacy Distractions

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Yesterday, I decided to record the number of distractions I faced on a regular work day. This proved to be a distraction in itself considering the pharmacy where I worked is in an open plan where technicians, phones, cubicles and door to the hospital hallway are all within ten feet of where I sit. There are four or five telephone lines which ring regularly. There are usually one to two other pharmacists sitting within five feet and two to three technicians in the same vicinity.

Yesterday I recorded over 150 interruptions. I even faulted myself for starting personal conversations which distracted others. 

What are some things we can do to make the pharmacy workplace have less distractions? Interruptions contribute to medication errors and having a dedicated space where interruptions are not allowed should be implemented. Chemotherapy entry, preparation and checking definitely falls into this category. The Institute for Safe Medication Practices found that each interruption is associated with a 12.7% increase in errors. I have personally attempted to enter new chemotherapy on a patient in the noisiest place where phones are ringing consistently, technicians are interrupting the workflow with issues on the phone that they cannot handle and other staff are just walking by to chat, all while the TV is reporting the news and a radio in the back is piping out 80s music. It is enough to cause me to go into panic mode. Ask for a dedicated space with less distractions or a no-interruption zone. You may not get it but it is on the record that you asked. In the meantime, one tip I have tried is headphones with something soothing to completely block out all noise when concentration is key. Bose makes great noise-canceling headphones that work! Though I would love to work in silence, blocking out everything but one sound is better than ten sounds all interrupting and distracting what you are trying to do safely. 

Another source of interruptions is when a medication is out-of-stock. This issue can completely lead a pharmacist into a rabbit hole of issues. First I have to ask if we have the medication which leads to comments of inventory failure and what process is to blame. Second we have to call other hospitals and ask to borrow a medication which interrupts them as well. We also have to call a courier service to deliver the medication which leads to delay in delivery of treatment to the patient. If we could reduce missing medications, we could reduce distractions and phone calls. This type of interruption falls under system distractions along with medication timing and other issues that causes distractions on how we handle system failures or deficits.

Alert fatigue is another source of distraction. It is common for me to receive five or more alerts per order when entering a medication with the majority being unnecessary. For example, when entering a sodium chloride IV fluid, I will routinely be alerted that the chloride in the IV fluid will be a duplication with the potassium chloride (chloride duplication). I will also receive an alert that sodium chloride is on national backorder. Most of the times medication alerts include what is formulary, nonformulary, to notify IT staff when medication is depleted, duplication of class that isn't clinically significant, insignificant labs that can include a time period longer than current hospitalization and even how to enter medications differently for a new process that can change quite often. It is used more times than not as an email to communicate inventory issues that should be saved for another time and not when entering a medication where the most important issues are drug, strength, indication, directions and allergies. All of the important stuff can be diluted quickly by things that are nowhere near as important than the task at hand.

Educating the staff is very important in handling distractions and improving patient safety. Educating the staff to know when to interrupt with something important that cannot wait a second and when to write a note for the pharmacist to handle a few minutes later is important. Placing phones with multiple lines in a separate area to lower distractions while the pharmacist is entering orders or checking orders and/or having a designated technician to answer phones and not filling is an idea to consider. Also educating a technician on how to answer the phone and troubleshoot is invaluable!

The Institute for Safe Medication Practices has looked at this issue and has an invaluable write-up about things that can be done to help pharmacists and technicians focus on what matters most... patient safety.

 

 

 

 

 

Multilayers

One thing I have noticed about the errors I have made... distraction. I do not mean distraction with other team members or music, but the distraction within the order itself. Take for instance an order written for an IV fluid with no rate written from the ER. Immediately the info missing is the glaring distraction of the true issue: the MD wrote for incompatible fluids. It is easy for me to forget the multilayer dimension of errors. Overlook the error within the error. Those always seem to make me stop and think. Maybe errors come in pairs.

A pharmacist is like a detective trying to solve a case. May your cases always be easy and obvious!

Medication Errors

More of a serious post here but contemplating the concept of humans and errors.  We're going to have them as pharmacists because we are human; we just hope the errors we make aren't of the fatal variety.  Putting things in place to help reduce these errors is always a good thing.  In my previous gig, a nurse would enter the order (hospital pharmacy) and a pharmacist would review it against the scanned in order.  Other places I have worked, the pharmacist did both functions.  Although it is quicker for the pharmacist do go ahead and enter the order, I feel that two brains is always better one.  Even if one of the brains is a pharmacist and the other a desk clerk, it is still two brains as we all know that a lot of the times the errors are keystroke in nature. I like the way Walgreens has tackled errors with their hi tech computer system.  I like the way that they have reduced misfills, but have they tackled the initial entering of the order yet?  There's nothing to compare it to, unless you have a scanner to scan in and then a robot to read what is scanned.  Are we moving to that?