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The Evolution of Technology and Human Interaction

October 23, 2015 by Chuck DiTrapano RPh

I recently had a chance to read the article The Overdose: Harm in a Wired Hospital. If you have the time, it’s worth reading. This article brings up a number of important issues. I wanted to share my thoughts about those issues and the evolution of technology and human interaction in pharmacy.

As technology evolves, the role of the healthcare professional is changing. I am not entirely convinced that all of the changes are for the better. In fact, I believe the interface between humans, technology, and competency is potentially heading in the wrong direction! I base my observation on the following practice tenants:

1.   Assume it’s wrong.

2.   Who’s making the decision?

3.   Make this screen go away!

4.   Can I do this with my eyes closed?

5.   It’s too big to fail?

 

Assume it’s wrong.

As a practicing pharmacist, one of my responsibilities is to enter physicians’ orders into the pharmacy electronic system. As I do this, I ask myself several questions with each order: What was the physician’s intent? Is the drug / dose appropriate? Are there clinical issues with this drug on the patient’s medication profile? Only when I can answer ALL of these questions will I enter the order. By doing so, I have taken ownership of that order.

It’s easy to become complacent and assume that my purpose is to simply enter the order. But there is a big difference between just entering an order and taking ownership of it. I have a colleague who, when training new pharmacists, tells them to always assume the order is incorrect until it can be proven otherwise.

Many times the pharmacist’s approach is to default to the physician’s judgment. This unspoken chain of command was certainly a factor in The Overdose. The author points out, “As is so often the case with medical mistakes, the human inclination to say, “It must be right” can be powerful, especially for someone so low in the organizational hierarchy, for whom a decision to stop the line feels risky.” We may not be naturally inclined to question the physician’s orders, but sometimes it is imperative that we do so.

Additionally, human instinct is generally to look at something in a digital format and assume it’s correct. As the author in The Overdose points out, “humans have a bias toward trusting the computers, often more than they trust other humans, including themselves.” It takes an extra step to take a step back, ask questions, and actually take ownership of the order.

 

Who’s making the decision?

Where are we in healthcare IT today? We need an interface. We need to minimize keystrokes. It needs to be in the cloud. We want computer systems to talk to one another. We want to minimize the human intervention because human intervention leads to errors.

In theory, I agree with all of these statements. But I believe we must ask, “When do we need human intervention?” The fatal error that occurred in The Overdose points directly to this issue. This error was not due to a knowledge deficit in either physician or pharmacist. Both knew what was appropriate for this patient, but they missed the mark. I think the key factor was humans taking a backseat and allowing the IT system to make the decision. Are we comfortable with that?

In an effort to eliminate interface issues, we are gradually pulling healthcare professionals out of the decision making process. What role does it leave for us humans? I am certainly not against technology; in fact I’m all for it! But I am concerned that we are going too far, too fast. Technology should enhance and guide our decisions, provide answers, and make our jobs easier. It should help to educate us and make us better at our jobs. It should not make decisions in spite of us.

At the hospital in The Overdose, “They eliminated the step of the pharmacist checking on the robot, because the idea is you’re paying so much money because it’s so accurate.” We need to ensure that someone is still there to check on the robot. We need to retain human intervention.

 

Make this screen go away!

Anyone working in a modern hospital pharmacy has dealt with the complexity of most IT systems. Often, you know what you want to do, but just can’t get it done. You sometimes find yourself in a maze that seems to have no exit. The medication order you are trying to master becomes secondary to managing the system.

If you have ever taken the subway, you can probably relate. Recently, I traveled to Paris, France. My plan was to take a train from the Paris station to my next destination. I was told to take the Red line train, the A train. I knew the direction I wanted to go and as the train approached the station, I hopped on. All is well.

Not so fast. The Red Line split and headed in two different directions. I was on the wrong Red train.

The analogy I draw with the IT systems is the same. I know what I want to do, I know the train I want to take, but just can’t seem to get there. Take for example, a physician who enters an order for a PEDIATRIC patient, but the drug happens to have an ADULT pathway as well. If the physician chooses the adult pathway, the dose rounding may be different. Adult dose rounding could be to the nearest 10 mg instead of to the nearest 0.1 mg. Same drug, but with a very different outcome. In this situation, the responsibility to catch the error would land squarely on the pharmacist.

As difficult as it is for pharmacists, I think the complexity of IT systems also presents a clear challenge for physicians, especially residents. The true intent of the physician may be misinterpreted just because it was the wrong order set, the wrong panel, or the wrong patient category. That is exactly why, for us pharmacists, I will reiterate tenant #1 – Always assume the order is incorrect until it can be proven otherwise.

 

Can I do this with my eyes closed?

One of the greatest innovations in medication safety has been the introduction of barcode verification for dose preparation, medication dispensing, and dose administration. Barcode verification provides assurance that you have the right drug, in the right form, and in the right dose. It has definitely saved lives. The problem though, is the potential for the caregiver to become disengaged and detached from the process. Instead of reading the label, we just listen for the confirmation beep. When barcode verification becomes a substitute for reading the label, I believe we could actually be increasing the risk of medication error!

In The Overdose, the author points out that, “the nurse trusted something she believed was even more infallible than any of her colleagues: the hospital’s computerized bar-coding system.” This is why it is so important that we retain human engagement in every process.

Additionally, most electronic systems offer no help in identifying when there is actually a problem. There are so many false alerts that most experienced users pay little or no attention to them. Another reason to agree with Sully Sullenberger! To summarize his quote from this article: We need to be capable of independent critical thought and prioritize our warning systems so that important alarms don’t get lost in the shuffle. Check out this blog post including how Sully Sullenberger has also inspired us. We have even utilized that inspiration as a springboard for development at RxTOOLKIT!

 

It’s too big to fail?

As IT systems become more inclusive, it is sometimes impossible to tweak one aspect of the program without affecting another part of the program. Sometimes that second part could include a medication issue. For example, let’s suppose you want to create a tool that nursing can use during a pediatric crisis.  The tool is designed by nursing, programed by a non-healthcare professional, and then published. The tool really doesn’t affect pharmacy, so pharmacy is not consulted. What could go wrong?

In most instances, the medication files in an IT system would be set up using several different drug files: one drug file for adults, one for pediatrics, and one for NICU. If the programmer is unaware that there are three separate drug files and builds the application using only the adult drug file, all of the doses and concentrations could potentially be incorrect. This type of nuance is not always readily apparent to the people building or performing the QA checks on the final product.

It’s easy to see how individual silos within the programming team can lead to bad results simply because, “you don’t know what you don’t know”.

 

Where do we go from here?

So how do we move forward and deal with these issues? Here are my current recommendations:

1. Lower the expectations that your primary IT system can do everything. These systems are fantastic, but like everything else, there are things they do well and things that they don’t.

 2. There must be a balance between the operational process and IT capabilities. If you find yourself striking a disproportionate balance: stop, rethink, and readjust.

3. Don’t build a new process around IT capabilities. We should never expect IT capabilities to supersede operational process. IT solutions should integrate with your established process.

4. Observe how your staff is really using your technology. If you observe that your staff has become disengaged; it’s time to re-train and re-engage.

5. Whenever there is a process or programming change and medications are involved, include pharmacy in the development team. This applies even if the new process was not built for or will not be utilized by pharmacy.

6. Don’t give up on the humans. Knowledgeable users who are engaged in the operational process are absolutely necessary for positive outcomes.

7. Don’t give up on the humans. (This is worth repeating!) There are qualified and conscientious people out there who care about doing the job correctly and accurately. These are the folks you want on your team!

Filed Under: Medication Safety, Pharmacy Technology Tagged With: awareness, barcode scanning, medication error, medication safety, patient and provider safety, pharmacy technology, RxTOOLKIT, working conditions

RxWORKFLOW™: Integrating Technology and Process

December 23, 2014 by Chuck DiTrapano RPh

This post was updated on 06-18-20

I am a Pharmacist, entrepreneur, and founder of several websites: RxTOOLKIT.com, RxTOOLKITLabels.com, and RxTOOLKITeLEARNING.com These sites, applications, and ultimately my life’s work, have principally focused on reducing preventable mediation errors. Our product development has always centered on technology, automation, and the advancement of tools. These tools assist in clinical decision making, minimize human errors, provide instant access to information, and improve the dosing and compounding of medications. RxTOOLKIT® has created many innovative and essential tools and we have worked hard to make sure those tools were accessible, affordable, and easy to use.

Recently I had the privilege of spending time with Chris Jerry, President of the Emily Jerry Foundation. Chris lost his little girl Emily, because of a medication error and has now dedicated his life to realizing zero preventable medication errors. At a point during my conversations with Chris, I had an epiphany regarding my life’s work:

  • I must enhance the methodology and development of tools for RxTOOLKIT—in fact, improving how we approach the very process of development and implementation.
  • What became crystal clear to me, is that while tools and technology are tremendously important, what really makes the tools work is integrating them into a standardized PROCESS.

Following my conversation with Chris, I reflected on STAT events that occur often in clinical settings. My experience and reflection served to validate and strengthen our new approach. This breakthrough was wholly actualized in RxTOOLKIT’s latest development RxWORKFLOW™—User-friendly drug-specific monographs that provide reference, procedural information, and tools including RxQuickCALC™, RxCALC™, and RxDoseCHECK™.

 

Sully Sullenberger

Chris mentioned that he had a chance to meet Sully Sullenberger, the pilot responsible for an emergency water landing of US Airways Flight 1549 in the Hudson River. Despite all of the notoriety he has received, Chris believed him to be a genuinely good and humble person. Chris said Sully is still confused over the attention he has received. Sully’s comment was, “I was just doing my job.”

It got me thinking about how well Sully must have known his job. He had very few seconds to make decisions that affected not only his own life, but also the lives of 150 passengers and 5 fellow crew members. In those few precious seconds, he made all of the correct decisions. The landing became known as the “Miracle on the Hudson”.

Was it a miracle? Or was it the result of a crew so well trained, so well prepared, that they instinctively knew what to do in the few seconds they had? I thought about all of the training and redundancy that makes up a pilot’s day. Pre‐flight checklists so well memorized they could do them in their sleep. None‐the‐less, pilot and co‐pilot go through the whole list together, before each and every flight.

Sully knew the process. He knew it so well that he instinctively performed it under extreme circumstances and with absolutely zero time to think.

 

STAT Events in the Pharmacy

Chaos can come at any time for a clinician. When looking closer at the Emily Jerry tragedy it’s easy to see that Eric Cropp, the pharmacist considered responsible for the error, was overwhelmed because of staffing issues, a computer system shutdown, and environmental distractions. One or all of these factors could have contributed directly to the error. All of the factors undoubtedly contributed to creating a STAT scenario for the pharmacy that day.

Anyone who has worked in a clinical setting has no doubt had some experience with STAT scenarios. In a hospital setting, they are often be initiated by an announcement coming in from the trauma department or the NICU. Medication orders can start coming in waves. It is easy to go from calm to chaos in just a few moments.

At the end of a rush, the team will usually spend some time reviewing each and every order, double checking packages to ensure that correct drugs were used, and analyzing reports from medication preparation and delivery devices to ensure there were no keystroke errors.

When considering the stress and chaos that can occur, I began to think about what really leads to a successful outcome.

Technology? Yes it helps.

But what really got me through those times is the fact that I knew my job—inside and out. And my team, well they knew their jobs inside and out too. In a STAT situation, as I would begin to bark orders, clinicians would instinctively respond as they have been trained to do. In these times, it is the tools, training, and the established PROCESS that get us through. My staff worked as a cohesive team; each member assuming their role with knowledge and confidence.

As a pharmacy manager I had a responsibility to prepare my staff so well that it became instinct for them. Team leaders need to look at each task, identify the key process elements, and train, train and train. We must establish standardized processes as we break down complex procedures into manageable steps. We must provide the best technology and tools available. The entire team must be competent and fully understand how to use them.

And for me, above all else, it became clear that PROCESS must be fully integrated with the tools and technology that we bring to development. This new breakthrough can be clearly illustrated by looking at RxTOOLKIT’s latest development, RxWORKFLOW™.

 

Introducing RxWORKFLOW™: User-friendly drug specific monographs that provide interactive reference, procedural information, and tools including RxQuickCALC™, RxCALC™, and RxDoseCHECK™

RxWORKFLOW for IV Safety™ drug monographs provide the appropriate drug information, tools, and procedural information to support the safe preparation and administration of IV drugs. All information is professionally curated, continuously updated, and easy to find including:

  • Standard Infusion Concentrations
  • Dose Information
  • Use in Specific Populations
  • Warnings and Precautions
  • Drug Preparation Information
  • Drug Administration Information

Every RxWORKFLOW for IV Safety™ monograph includes on-the-spot tools that assist in preparation or administration. These tools are always what you need for that specific drug:

RxQuickCALC™:

  • Basic infusion rate
  • Body surface area
  • Conversion calculations
  • Creatinine clearance
  • And many more!

RxCALC™:

  • Complex infusion rate
  • Infusion rate tapering tables
  • Dose preparation instructions
  • Concentration checks

RxDoseCHECK™

  • Verify dose and infusion rate accuracy

Summary of Benefits:

  • Provides a single source of standardized reference, tools, and training
  • Enhances safety, consistency, and standard of care
  • Drug specific preparation and administration tools including RxQuickCALC™, RxCALC™, and RxDoseCHECK™

 

Conclusion

At RxTOOLKIT®, we believe that technology can unquestionably save lives and that we need established training and strong leadership in the pharmacy. Independently, however, they are not enough. What will ultimately reduce preventable medication errors is the integration of process with intuitive technology inside the established workflow. I sincerely believe we can make Chris’s goal of ZERO preventable medication errors a reality.

Please contact us for more information about RxWORKFLOW™ or to schedule a live demo.

 

Check out this infographic representing RxWORKFLOW™:
(Click image to view larger)

Introducing RxWORKFLOW™ by RxTOOLKIT®

Filed Under: Competency, Medication Safety, Personal Stories, Pharmacy Technology Tagged With: awareness, barcode scanning, Eric Cropp, medication safety, patient and provider safety, pharmacy technology, prevention, working conditions

Medication Errors “A Pharmacist’s Tale” – John Karwoski, RPh, MBA

July 12, 2013 by Chuck DiTrapano RPh

MEDICATION ERRORS
“A Pharmacist’s Tale”

I was working at the hospital last night and caught a “near-miss… The physician ordered a 4000 unit bolus dose of heparin. The technician prepared and brought me the 4 mL labeled syringe along with the vial of heparin to check. I realized the vial he used was a concentration of 10,000 units per mL. This syringe contained 40,000 units of heparin, enough probably to kill this 70 some year old patient. I showed the “new” technician, a young college student looking to go to medical school and follow in his father’s footsteps. He prepared the correct dose and we sent it up. I was still thinking about the error I caught later that evening and went over to the technician and explained to him how I made an error as a young pharmacist, mixing up the wrong dose of a chemo drug and how it brought me back to an old pharmacist lesson, “READ LABELS 3 TIMES”. I told him I still do this today and that it works. He was grateful to me for the suggestion.

I could not sleep that night thinking of that “near-miss”. When it happened I wanted to show my supervisor but the other staff said that he would just get him in trouble. Errors should not have that type of repercussion. We should learn from errors and everyone should be encouraged to bring forth errors or potential errors. As a consultant, I have reviewed numerous medication errors at surgery centers thru the years and have tried to offer suggestions to prevent future errors. I have a few ideas to think about:

1. READ LABELS 3 TIMES: once when you pick up the drug, once when you prepare the drug and once before you administer the drug.
2. If you treat pediatric patients, I would implement a policy that a second nurse check all medications prior to administration. And please tell your staff they must read everything on the label.
3. A few drugs found in ASCs should be handled more carefully. First, if you stock concentrated KCl vials, remove them from the facility! You do not need them and if your Anesthesiologist questions you have them call me. If all else fails, you can purchase KCL riders already diluted.
4. KCL isn’t the only concentrated electrolyte. 23.9% sodium Chloride and magnesium Sulfate vials must also be further diluted prior to administration. My recommendation is to place these drug vials in binss or plastic bags wherever they are stored and label them in BIG letters: “STOP: MUST BE DILUTED BEFORE ADMINISTRATION” You can also store these drugs away from other drugs and even as far as keeping them in the director’s office where you would have to ask for a vial.(don’t forget about the Anestheia carts where I see Mag sulfate vials occasionally. And mag sulfate is also on some crash carts which is OK if labeled correctly.)
5. Another drug on some ASC formularies is 0.75% bupivicaine (Marcaine, Sensorcaine). Bupivicanine toxicity is very dangerous and this strength can cause toxicity a lot quicker then the 0.25% or 0.5%. Have your intralipid protocol attached to the lipids IV bag or bottle.
6. Review your formulary for high risk drugs, sound alike look alike drugs, visit ISMP to find out more about what drugs can be dangerous, talk to you consultant pharmacist and develop policies on safe handling of these drugs.
7. Promote error reporting from your staff and don’t forget, “near-misses” because I didn’t and it saved someone’s life.

John Karwoski, RPh, MBA
President and Founder
JDJ Consulting, LLC

Filed Under: Medication Safety, Personal Stories Tagged With: medication safety, near miss, patient and provider safety, pharmacy technician, working conditions

In My Own Words

June 28, 2013 by Chuck DiTrapano RPh

In February 2006, I reported to work in the early morning, at a primary pediatric hospital in Cleveland. I worked double shifts the previous two days, so I was tired when I arrived. The hospital’s computer system had been down for ten hours prior, so I knew I was in for a busy day. The hospital staff was in a state of panic. The phones were ringing off the hook. Nurses and doctors were calling in looking for their missing medications. By the time the computer system finally came back up, we were buried with labels printing from three different shifts. Our pharmacy was compact; the area where we made IVs was the size of a small closet and the checking area was a 4′ x 6′ table. Within an hour the table was filled and beginning to pile up. We were running out of bins to put the finished products so many were mixed together. I spent the next hour trying to check as fast as possible. I caught numerous errors that day, but I missed the most important: my technician had prepared a child’s chemotherapy base solution mix of sodium chloride 23 times more than what was ordered.

I asked the technician if the bag I was checking was sodium chloride, but didn’t confirm that it was 0.9%. I saw an empty bag of sodium chloride 0.9% on the table and thought that had been used to fill the empty via-flex bag. After checking the bag, the solution was combined with the ordered chemo agent, checked again, and sent to the floor to be administered. When the nurse administered the fatal dose of sodium chloride, it caused the child’s brain to swell sending her into a coma. Three days later, she died.

Her name was Emily. I live every day with the responsibility for her death.

I was later convicted of involuntary manslaughter. I received six months of jail time, six months of house arrest, 3 years of probation, a $5,000 fine, and 400 hours of community service. I also lost my license, career, reputation, and much of my confidence.

But the worst thing of all is living every day with the memory of that little girl whose life was cut short.

I accept my role in what happened, but I am filled with regret. I truly wish I could go back and check that solution more carefully. Though I could easily dwell in the past, I am sharing my story with the hope that we can all learn from my mistake.

Many factors led up to the medication error. They are common occurrences happening in hospitals and retail pharmacies across this country, every single day. If we are to avoid similar tragedies, they must be addressed.

One factor is that pharmacy technicians need better training. Most people don’t realize that techs are involved in approximately 96% of prescription compounding in pharmacies. According to the National Pharmacy Technician Association (NPTA), 92% of the US does not require technicians to have any formal training. The technician working for me had only a GED. She didn’t know a thing about the different concentrations of sodium chloride. One positive change that resulted from this tragedy is Emily’s Law. It requires that all techs undergo training and pass a competency exam in Ohio. NPTA and the Emily Jerry Foundation are currently working on an additional bill to institute Emily’s Law nationwide.

Another factor is having a bar-scanning system in place; my hospital did not. Almost every supermarket in the country utilizes this technology. Why not pharmacies? There are so many look-a-like and sound-a-like medications that come in small vials with tiny labels. Errors can easily be made. There are many bar-scanning systems currently on the market, which can act as a safety net. I truly wish one had been in place that day.

But this technology isn’t enough; pharmacists and technicians need better working conditions. Pharmacies are cramped and the workload is often heavy. Studies have shown that crowding and dim lighting often lead to mistakes. Additionally, interruptions, filling too many prescriptions, and long shifts frequently cause errors. Believe me, I and many pharmacists, have said a little prayer on their way home that an error didn’t slip by.

Finally, I wish I had been able to talk to the family directly when the error occurred. I wasn’t given the chance to personally say I was sorry. The hospital management met with the family and I was advised not to talk to them. There exists a culture of silence and bureaucracy and it must be changed.

Similar errors happen every day and people continue to talk about my error; but no one has yet addressed why the error occurred and how it could have been prevented. I want to be part of changing the current system. We need to figure out how we can be supported (not prosecuted) by our hospitals and institutions.

This is why Chuck and I developed medsafetyonline. We want to allow pharmacists, doctors, nurses, and other caregivers to be able to come together; to discuss their own experiences, and concerns, to find support, and lastly, but most importantly, to use what we learn to make the systems safer. We hope that by increasing dialog, improving pharmacy education, and advocating for automation and technology we can change the system for the better.

We hope you find support in this community. By coming together we will help others learn from our mistakes and hopefully create a positive change.

Filed Under: Personal Stories Tagged With: barcode scanning, criminal charges, felony charges, look-a-like medication, medication error, NPTA, patient and provider safety, pharmacy technician, pharmacy technology, punitive action for medication errors, sound-a-like medication, working conditions

My Near Miss

June 22, 2013 by Chuck DiTrapano RPh

About 6 years ago I was working as the IV pharmacist on second shift and I was presented with a large number of IV’s to check prior to delivery.

The IV delivery to the nursing units was already late and I felt the pressure to get the IV’s checked as fast as possible. I was checking the lot of IV’s at a speed that I thought safe.

I checked one IV for D5W 1,000 mL with 50 mEq of Sodium Bicarbonate. As I checked it, I put my initial on the label and then moved on to the next IV. Something, and I don’t know what, caused me to stop and re-look at that IV one more time. I checked everything again and suddenly realized that the technician had injected 50 mL of Potassium Acetate 2 mEq / mL in the bag instead of 50 mL of Sodium Bicarbonate.

It is still difficult today to articulate how I felt at that moment. I was very close to physical illness. I don’t know what happened to make me look at that IV again, but I am so thankful that I did. I think about that incident whenever I think about Eric Cropp’s story.

I am fortunate to work in a hospital that has shown it lives by a just culture. I have witnessed personally how they have approached incidents and they do all they can for the patient, the family, and the caregiver.

Eric wasn’t so lucky. I know him and I know how difficult it is for him to live with the consequences of the error. I admire him so much for doing all he can to help the rest of us in our practice environments.

Please share your near miss with our readers. It helps to tell the story and it helps the healing process. It can also help the rest of us prevent it from happening to our patients. Report events through ISMP-MERPS to help protect your colleagues and their patients.

At the very least, please take our survey and stop back often to see what stories are being told.

We are all in the healthcare profession to help our neighbor.; certainly none of us wants to do any harm.

Hopefully by sharing our stories, we can help each other and bring awareness to prevention.

 

Filed Under: Personal Stories Tagged With: awareness, Eric Cropp, near miss, patient and provider safety, pharmacy technician, prevention, working conditions

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