adoption of change in hospital pharmacy practice jean-françois bussières b pharm msc mba fcshp...

Post on 31-Mar-2015

217 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Adoption of Change in Hospital Pharmacy Practice 

Jean-François BussièresB Pharm MSc MBA FCSHP

Chef, département de pharmacie et unité de recherche en pratique pharmaceutique, CHU Sainte-Justine

Professeur titulaire de clinique, Faculté de pharmacie, Université de Montréal

Kevin HallB. Sc. Pharm., Pharm. D., FCSHP

Clinical Associate ProfessorFaculty of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences

University of Alberta

Objectives

• To understand the typical trajectory associated with the adoption of change, following the initial availability of evidence supporting the change

• To discuss possible ways of accelerating the adoption of evidence-based improvements in the practice of pharmacy

Hall, Kevin (revisions)

Adoption of change in healthcare

Following the availability of evidence supporting the adoption of a new healthcare practice, how many years do you think will pass, on average, before the improved practice will be in widespread usage?

•2 years?•5 years?•9 years?•17 years?•25 years?

Balas et al.

Managing clinical knowledge for health care improvement

• 1843– Oliver Wendell Holmes – Boston Society for Medical Improvement– Contagiousness of puerperal fever– Advocated hand washing before examining a

pregnant woman … « a revolutionary idea at the time »

‘Managing clinical knowledge for health care improvement’

• Studied nine clinical procedures

• Calculated the annual increase in use by dividing the current rate of use by the number of years between the publication of the landmark trial and the reported current use

• Average: 3.2% increase each year

• 15.6 years required before an innovation is used by 50% of potential users

There was twice as much evidence available in 1995 than there was in 1966

Imagine now …

2 x

The nine clinical interventions

Calculated that onaverage it takes

17 yearsfor researchevidence toreach clinicalpractices

Does the figure of 17 years seem excessive for the adoption of change in

hospital pharmacy practice?

Sources of information used to identify key issues in pharmacy practice

• Pharmacy and other Scientific Literature

• Hospital Pharmacy in Canada Report

• CSHP 2015 Survey Results

What information can we glean from these sources concerning the adoption

of change in pharmacy practice?

Trends from the HPC Report• Six examples ….

– Unit-dose distribution service– IV admixture service – Use of barcodes in the drug-use process– Implementation of computerized prescriber

order entry (CPOE) systems– Pharmacy technician scope of practice– Pharmacist scope of practice

Hall, Kevin (revisions)
This is the type of material that I think should be emphasized in the presentation. In my opinion, many of the earlier slides could be deleted and the emphasis could be placed on 20 (or fewer) changes. I would focus on the changes, drawing upon the data from the HPC survey, including the CSHP 2015 data, to demonstrate how rapidly these changes were adopted (or not).
Hall, Kevin (revisions)
A few other changes that I think we could examine include the following:Tech check techTechnician-managed drug distributionDecentralized pharmacist practice modelUse of automated decentralized cabinetsRemoval of concentrated KCL from patient unitsAdoption of TallMan letteringUse of pharmacists with advanced practice trainingI could come up with more by quickly skimming through the report

Adoption of change in Pharmacy Practice

• Approximately when was the innovation proven to be beneficial?

• What level of implementation had been achieved by 2012?

Source: Parker P. Unit-dose systems reduce error, increase efficiency.

Hospitals JAHA 1968; 42: 65-72.

Unit-dose distribution systems

65 %

Hall, Kevin (revisions)
It's not clear if the 65% represents the combination of total and partial unit dose systems. Why isn't 2009/10 included? Is it correct to say "total" when the criteriawe use in the survey is coverage of "greater than 90% of beds?
Hall, Kevin (revisions)
This isn't a big deal, but since the slides are otherwise in english, you might want to change the labels to "Total" and "Partial". Just for consistency

2012 minus 1968

=44 years and and the use of unit dose systems, full or partial, was

reported by only 65% of respondents !

1978

Hall, Kevin (revisions)
I moved this slide ahead of the next slide, since I think the pattern you are pursuing is to show when the evidence for the initiative was first reported, then to show how the innovation has been adopted, or not, since then.

IV admixture to > 90% patients

64 % in 2012

2012 minus 1978

=34 years !

1974

Use of barcoding in hospital pharmacy

Range of 2-22% in 2012

2012 minus 1974

=38 years !

Computerized prescriber order entry systems

Emergingevidencebut stilla lot ofunknownsabout theirimpact

2008

Implementation of CPOEs

5% in 2004 9% in 2012

Scope of Practice Changes for Pharmacists and Pharmacy

Technicians

Pharmacy Technician Scope of Practice

• “The counting and pouring often alleged to be the pharmacist’s chief occupation will in time be done by technicians and eventually by automation. The pharmacist of tomorrow will function by reason of what he knows, increasing the efficiency and safety of drug therapy and working as a specialist in his own right.”, Dean Tice of the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy 1961

2012

2012 minus 1961

=51 years !

Pharmacist Scope of Practice

• “I would establish as the principal qualifications of a clinical practitioner that he bear personal responsibility for the safe and effective use of drugs in a number of patients on a continuing basis.”

• Don Francke 1976

Independent prescribing rights for pharmacists

Alberta allowed pharmacists to acquire independent prescribing rights beginning in 2006.

Since then, what percentage of pharmacists have obtained independent prescribing rights?

4% ?

10% ?

18% ?

50% ?

71% ?

2012 minus 1976

=36 years !

Pharmacy technicians as a supportrole for clinical services

8to37%

(excluding drug distribution liaison)

Is Pharmacy an evidence-based Profession?

No evidence for clinical activities=higher priority

Source: http://www.lillyhospitalsurvey.ca/hpc2/content/home.asp

So why do changes occurso slowly ?

• Why do we have such significant gaps between objectives, priorities and implementation ?– Limited resources ($, human)?– Too many competing priorities?– Lack of leadership?– Staff attitudes?

• What contributes to the successes that are reported?– Passion and motivation?– Staff awareness?– Incorportation of CSHP 2015 in strategic planning?– Inspirational leadership?

Barriers to change …• Unsuccessful passive diffusion …

• Results difficult to understand …

• Too much information …

• People feel they should not change what works !

• No expertise …

• No incentive …

• Fear …

Hall, Kevin (revisions)
This slide is very busy and contains a lot of points that aren't related to the issue that I think you are trying to make. Couldn't you just put the title of the report on the slide and then speak to it?

top related