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1. First Do No Harm: Ensuring the Safe and Effective Use of Health ITAHRQ HIT Conference Sept, 2009 Ross Koppel, Ph.D.
Sociology Department, University of Pennsylvania & Center for Clinical Epidemiology & Biostatistics,
School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania
rkoppel@sas.upenn.edu
3. JAMA, March 9, 2005 Role of Computerized Physician Order Entry Systems in Facilitating Medication Errors
Ross Koppel, PhD
Joshua P. Metlay, MD, PhD
Abigail Cohen, PhD
Brian Abaluck, BS
A. Russell Localio, JD, MPH, MS
Stephen E. Kimmel, MD, MSCE
Brian L. Strom, MD, MPH
4. Role of Computerized Physician Order Entry Systems in Facilitating Medication Errors List of positives
Noted 22 problems, e.g.:
Wrong: pt, med, dose, test-linked meds
Confused dose cancelling = doubling dose when want to reduce dose
Wrong dose guidance
5. Role of Computerized Physician Order Entry Systems in Facilitating Medication Errors Ultimate Claim: CPOE good but
not good enough
Emperor not naked, but sometimes threadbare
6. Methods Survey
Shadowing
Interviews with leaders
Intensive interviews
Many focus groups
IT workers
Much more
7. Reaction
Vendors
New York Times
Wall Street Journal
Washington Post
NPR
Millions of web hits
Within months, JBI devoted section of issue
8. More Reaction
9. Next: About 25 Articles on HIT
10. Harrison, Koppel & Bar-Lev (JAMIA, 2007) Interactive Sociotechnical Systems Analysis
11. Also, Harrison, & Koppel, 2009) Interactive Sociotechnical Systems Analysis
12. Harrison, Koppel & Bar-Lev (JAMIA, 2007) Interactive Sociotechnical Systems Analysis
16. Workarounds to Barcode Medication Administration Systems: Their Occurrences, Causes, and Threats to Patient Safety
ROSS KOPPEL, PHD,
TOSHA WETTERNECK, MD, MS,
JOEL LEON TELLES, PHD,
BEN-TZION KARSH, PHD
17. Patient wrist barcode
18. On every medicine
19. 31 Causes of workarounds e.g., Unreadable medication-barcodes (crinkled, smudged, torn, missing, covered by another label)
20. Causes: Unreadable or missing patient-ID-wristbands (chewed, soaked, missing)
Elderly, Children, Moving (unit or floor or nursing home)
Failing batteries of handheld scanners or linked computers
Difficult-to-read or navigate screens
Alert beeps that sound like confirmation beeps
Emergencies
Pharmacies sending only partial doses
About 20 others.
21. Results 1: Fifteen identified workarounds (a) (Extra Copies)
1 example….Reproducing patients’ wristband ID-barcodes, & affixing them to nursing station, computer cart, supply room, pt’s room doorjamb, medication dispensing machine…
22. Results 1: Fifteen identified workarounds (b) Continued…. RN clipboard, scanner itself,
in nurses’ pockets or on
belt-rings, or worn as a
group of bangles on
nurse’s sleeve.
And 14 other workarounds
23. JAMAMarch 25, 2009
24. Two Clauses in HIT Vendor Contracts Who is responsible for errors? Even if hidden and embedded in the Software? And even if you are following the manual?
25. Who can you tell? The Non-Disclosure Clause
26. Other Recent Publications of Note COMPARISON OF 7 NATION’S USE OF CPOE. Health Affairs
WAYS OF MEASURING MEDICATION ERRORS USING HIT. JAMIA
WEBINARS AND M&Ms
ANALYSIS OF THE 80 HOUR RULE
FOLLOW UP ON CPOE
ANALYSIS OF MEANINGFUL USE…
27. Matt’s Questions
28. 1. Should the issue of EHR safety be built into the Initiatives supported in HITECH?
29. 2. What should be the research agenda in this area? Focus on quality.
But conventional methods limited.
30. 3. What roles should the government and private industry play? The JC?
1. I say….
2. Others say….
3. Industry and representatives want….
31. The Government’s Role
32. 4. How do we ensure that implementations of products are done in a way that ensures safety?
33. 5. In what ways are vendors and healthcare organizations interacting to ensure safe and effective use of EHRs?
34. 6. Create a health IT usability lab. How funded? How to work it? Yes
Funding: Gov’t, Industry and Users
Recognize it’s limited to in vitro testing. Great idea, but only a start.
35. No. 7 (condensed) The Health IT Extension Centers will help clinicians become meaningful users.
How can we incorporate support to ensure safe and effective use of health IT into the services that they provide?
Who else should we help?
36. Simple Answer: Build better software:
Training faster
Less onerous
Fewer battles with counter intuitive designs
37. Thank you! Questions? Ross Koppel, Ph.D.
Sociology Department, University of Pennsylvania &
Center for Clinical Epidemiology & Biostatistics,
School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania
rkoppel@sas.upenn.edu