2019
DOI: 10.1186/s12913-019-4146-6
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Evaluating the implementation and impact of a pharmacy technician-supported medicines administration service designed to reduce omitted doses in hospitals: a qualitative study

Abstract: Background Of the various types of medication administration error that occur in hospitals, dose omissions are consistently reported as among the most common. It has been suggested that greater involvement from pharmacy teams could help address this problem. A pilot service, called pharmacy TECHnician supported MEDicines administration (TECHMED), was introduced in an English NHS hospital for a four-week period in order to reduce preventable medication dose omissions. The objective of this study wa… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Five out of ten (50.0%) of centres reported a pharmacy technician or assistant as part of the overall critical care pharmacy workforce and only one centre receives speci c ECMO funding for a pharmacy technician. This is disappointing, as pharmacy technician and assistants are integral to the clinical pharmacy workforce, and previous studies have reported their impact at lowering omitted doses of critical medicines and time spent on nurse medication ward rounds [9,10].…”
Section: Interpretation Workforcementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Five out of ten (50.0%) of centres reported a pharmacy technician or assistant as part of the overall critical care pharmacy workforce and only one centre receives speci c ECMO funding for a pharmacy technician. This is disappointing, as pharmacy technician and assistants are integral to the clinical pharmacy workforce, and previous studies have reported their impact at lowering omitted doses of critical medicines and time spent on nurse medication ward rounds [9,10].…”
Section: Interpretation Workforcementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pharmacy technicians and assistants provide an essential role in medicines reconciliation, patient counselling, stock inventory, and the supply of time-critical medicines [8]. In one study, investigators reported the utilisation of pharmacy technicians and assistants to support the supply of time critical medicines led to a reduction of omitted doses of antimicrobial and antiseizure medication [9]. The utilisation of pharmacy assistants led to a signi cant reduction in time to complete nurse medication rounds in a second study [10].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As one of the most commonly occurring MAEs, omitted doses have been the subject of improvement interventions in general hospitals targeting pharmacy staff/systems [27,38], nursing education, information technology and error reporting schemes [39], some with mixed results. The evidence base in psychiatry requires expansion as it is limited to a national UK benchmarking initiative [29], and two positive single site studies of awareness/benchmarking [26] and automated dispensing cabinets [40].…”
Section: Implications Of Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nurses at an English hospital have provided positive feedback about pharmacy technicians easing their workload owing to the medication round being reduced due to fewer interruptions spent on searching for missing medication [ 12 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%