Affiliations 

  • 1 Department of Pharmacy, Sarawak General Hospital, Ministry of Health Malaysia, Jalan Tun Ahmad Zaidi Adruce, 93586, Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia. [email protected]
  • 2 Department of Pharmacy, Sarawak General Hospital, Ministry of Health Malaysia, Jalan Tun Ahmad Zaidi Adruce, 93586, Kuching, Sarawak, Malaysia
J Pharm Policy Pract, 2022 Jan 24;15(1):7.
PMID: 35073999 DOI: 10.1186/s40545-022-00405-3

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Delays in producing discharge prescriptions have hindered the provision of bedside dispensing services (BEDISC) that enable medication reconciliation and pharmaceutical intervention, which is an important element in transitional care medication safety. We aimed to assess the impact of early medication discharge planning on the delivery of BEDISC in terms of the rate of bedside dispensing, medication errors, and cost-saving from medication reconciliation by reusing patient's own medicines (POMs).

METHODS: A pre-post intervention study was conducted at medical wards in a public tertiary hospital. During the intervention phase, a structured bedside dispensing process was delineated and conveyed to the doctors, nurses, and pharmacists. Regular verbal reminders were given to the doctors to prioritize discharge patients by producing the prescriptions once discharge decisions had been made and nurses to hand the prescriptions to ward pharmacists and not patients. Throughout the study, ward pharmacists were involved in medication reconciliation via screening of discharge prescriptions and reusing POMs, performed pharmaceutical interventions for any medication errors detected, and provided bedside dispensing with discharge counseling. Comparisons were made between bedside versus counter-dispensing at pre-post intervention phases using the chi-square test.

RESULTS: A total of 1097 and 817 discharge prescriptions were dispensed in the pre-intervention and post-intervention phases, respectively. The bedside dispensing rate increased by 13.5% following remedial actions (p 

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.