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Design of MARQUIS2: study protocol for a mentored implementation study of an evidence-based toolkit to improve patient safety through medication reconciliation

Authors :
Ryan Centafont
Tara Vlasimsky
Magdee Hugais
Lionel Picot-Vierra
Isha John
Karli Edholm
Cristy Singleton
Sara Platt
Amy D'Silva
Nancy Doherty
G. Randy Smith
Mark V. Williams
Tosha B. Wetterneck
Samer Badr
Loredana Diana Berescu
Jennifer Mello
Hina Ahmed
Adonice Khoury
Dwayne Pierce
Brandi Hamilton
Edward Fink
Andrea Nguyen
Nicole Murphy
Julianna Burton
Robert El-Kareh
Jeni Norstrom
Tian Yaw
Scott Kincaid
Lisa Jaser
Robert Pendleton
Jason M. Stein
Robert Osten
Brian Levin
Eric E. Howell
Colleen Shipman
Anuj K. Dalal
Deonni P. Stolldorf
Andrea Forgione
Samson Lee
Luigi Brunetti
Jenna Goldstein
Pamela Proctor
Eddie Eabisa
Sanchita Sen
Chi Zheng
Sarah Bojerek
Anthony Biondo
Brenda Asplund
Amy W. Baughman
Andrea Delrue
Adrian Gonzales
Katarzyna Szablowski
Kimberly Boothe
Mithu Molla
Jenna Swindler
Susan Pickle
Ken Kormorny
Stephanie K. Mueller
Regina Jahrstorfer
Anirudh Sridharan
Christine Roussel
Meghan Mallouk
Marcus Gresham
Catherine Yoon
Corrie Vasilopoulos
Zainulabdeen Al-Jammali
Michelle Murphy
Kyle Koenig
Arif Arifuddowla
Christopher Nyenpan
Margaret Curtin
Loutfi Succari
Sunil Kripalani
Olukemi Akande
Eugene Chu
Shantel Mullin
Andrew Cadorette
Sara John
Jeffrey L. Schnipper
Trina Huynh
Laura Driscoll
Harry Reyes Nieva
John Orav
Amanda S. Mixon
Olugbenga Arole
Hattie Main
Stephanie Rennke
Maribeth Cabie
Paul Sabatini
Eric Tichy
Chadrick Lowther
Stephanie Labonville
Joe Marcus
Kathryn Ruf
Source :
BMC Health Services Research, BMC health services research, vol 19, iss 1, BMC Health Services Research, Vol 19, Iss 1, Pp 1-10 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
BioMed Central, 2019.

Abstract

BackgroundThe first Multi-center Medication Reconciliation Quality Improvement Study (MARQUIS1) demonstrated that implementation of a medication reconciliation best practices toolkit decreased total unintentional medication discrepancies in five hospitals. We sought to implement the MARQUIS toolkit in more diverse hospitals, incorporating lessons learned from MARQUIS1.MethodsMARQUIS2 is a pragmatic, mentored implementation QI study which collected clinical and implementation outcomes. Sites implemented a revised toolkit, which included interventions from these domains: 1) best possible medication history (BPMH)-taking; 2) discharge medication reconciliation and patient/caregiver counseling; 3) identifying and defining clinician roles and responsibilities; 4) risk stratification; 5) health information technology improvements; 6) improved access to medication sources; 7) identification and correction of real-time discrepancies; and, 8) stakeholder engagement. Eight hospitalists mentored the sites via one site visit and monthly phone calls over the 18-month intervention period. Each site’s local QI team assessed opportunities to improve, implemented at least one of the 17 toolkit components, and accessed a variety of resources (e.g. implementation manual, webinars, and workshops). Outcomes to be assessed will include unintentional medication discrepancies per patient.DiscussionA mentored multi-center medication reconciliation QI initiative using a best practices toolkit was successfully implemented across 18 medical centers. The 18 participating sites varied in size, teaching status, location, and electronic health record (EHR) platform.We introduce barriers to implementation and lessons learned from MARQUIS1, such as the importance of utilizing dedicated, trained medication history takers, simple EHR solutions, clarifying roles and responsibilities, and the input of patients and families when improving medication reconciliation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14726963
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Health Services Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....41d8e61038dfb65c7447baa95cf8d591