Litcius/Paper detail

“Are we there yet?” Ten persistent hazards and inefficiencies with the use of medication administration technology from the perspective of practicing nurses

Teresa Taft, Elizabeth Rudd, Iona Thraen, Sadaf Kazi, Zoe Pruitt, Christopher Bonk, Deanna-Nicole Busog, Ella Franklin, A. Zachary Hettinger, Raj M. Ratwani, Charlene Weir

2023Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: (1) Characterize persistent hazards and inefficiencies in inpatient medication administration; (2) Explore cognitive attributes of medication administration tasks; and (3) Discuss strategies to reduce medication administration technology-related hazards. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Interviews were conducted with 32 nurses practicing at 2 urban, eastern and western US health systems. Qualitative analysis using inductive and deductive coding included consensus discussion, iterative review, and coding structure revision. We abstracted hazards and inefficiencies through the lens of risks to patient safety and the cognitive perception-action cycle (PAC). RESULTS: Persistent safety hazards and inefficiencies related to MAT organized around the PAC cycle included: (1) Compatibility constraints create information silos; (2) Missing action cues; (3) Intermittent communication flow between safety monitoring systems and nurses; (4) Occlusion of important alerts by other, less helpful alerts; (5) Dispersed information: Information required for tasks is not collocated; (6) Inconsistent data organization: Mismatch of the display and the user's mental model; (7) Hidden medication administration technologies (MAT) limitations: Inaccurate beliefs about MAT functionality contribute to overreliance on the technology; (8) Software rigidity causes workarounds; (9) Cumbersome dependencies between technology and the physical environment; and (10) Technology breakdowns require adaptive actions. DISCUSSION: Errors might persist in medication administration despite successful Bar Code Medication Administration and Electronic Medication Administration Record deployment for reducing errors. Opportunities to improve MAT require a deeper understanding of high-level reasoning in medication administration, including control over the information space, collaboration tools, and decision support. CONCLUSION: Future medication administration technology should consider a deeper understanding of nursing knowledge work for medication administration.

Topics & Concepts

WorkaroundPatient safetyCoding (social sciences)CognitionComputer scienceMedicineMedical emergencyNursingHealth carePsychiatryEconomic growthProgramming languageEconomicsMathematicsStatisticsPatient Safety and Medication ErrorsElectronic Health Records SystemsHealthcare Technology and Patient Monitoring