Synthesis Project Presentation.
2.PICOT
PICOT question: For ambulatory surgical patients(P)of age <75, how does standardized medication reconciliation process utilizing electronic methods (I) compared to standard questionnaire (C) reduce adverse drug reactions (O) within the operative phases of care (T)?
3.Systematic Search
Facchiano, L., & Snyder, C. H. (2012). Evidence-based practice for the busy nurse practitioner: Part two: Searching for the best evidence to clinical inquiries . Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners, 24(11), 640–648.
Eder, M. (2012, November 19). Developing and Selecting Topic Nominations for Systematic Reviews. Retrieved October 2, 2019, from https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK115731/.
- Key words I have used in my searches include medication discrepancies and surgery, medication reconciliation, medication errors associated with surgery, interaction of medications in surgical phases, readmission after surgery, medication history questionnaire, standardized medical history questionnaire, drug reaction in surgery, overuse of opioids in surgery.
- Inclusion criteria for patient population will be only patients having surgeries in ambulatory centers or same day surgery centers
- Exclusion criteria for patient population will be patients are classified as ASA3, cognitive impairments and age above 75
- My baseline search was to find research articles from year 2010 to 2019.For study, I have used the USA online library databases such as CINAHL, PubMed, Google Scholar, and Google search engine. I also looked for full text, peer reviewed articles, prospective studies, meta-analysis and systematic reviews.
- Evidence slide and synthesis of main ideas plus citations
Table 1
Synthesis Matrix
Main ideas | Russ, A. L., Jahn, M. A., Patel, H., Porter, B. W., Nguyen, K. A., Zillich, A. J., … Simon, S. (2018). Usability evaluation of a medication reconciliation tool: Embedding safety probes to assess users’ detection of medication discrepancies. Journal of Biomedical Informatics, 82, 178–186 | Friedman, S. (2018). Can Standardizing CABG care with clinical pathways reduce length of stay and hospital acquired infections? Seton Hall University DNP Final Projects. 25. | Vetter, T. R., Barman, J., Hunter, J. M., Jones, K. A., &Pittet, J. F. (2017). The effect of the implementation of preoperative and postoperative care elements of a perioperative surgical home model on outcomes in patients undergoing hip arthroplasty or knee arthroplasty. Anesthesia & Analgesia, 124(5), 1450-1458. | Taylor, S. Andrzejowski, J. Wiles, M. Bland, S. Jones, G. & Radley, S. (2018). A prospective observational study of the impact of an electronic questionnaire (ePAQ-PO) on the duration of nurse-led pre-operative assessment and patient satisfaction. PLoS One. 13(10)
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Mekonnen, A. B., McLachlan, A. J., & Brien, J. A. E. (2016). Pharmacy‐led medication reconciliation programs at hospital transitions: a systematic review and meta‐analysis. Journal of clinical pharmacy and therapeutics, 41(2), 128-144.
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Occurrence of medical discrepancies | Medical discrepancies occur due to natural errors as seen through the safety probes in the study | Medical discrepancies lead to reduction in on-time starts during surgery, anesthesia-related delays during surgery, and the rate of ICU admission.
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Ability of medical practitioners to recognize medication discrepancies | Patients had a higher rate of detecting the discrepancies as compared to healthcare professionals | ||||
Need for healthcare professional education | Medical practitioners need training to follow and adhere to the critical pathways for improved patient outcomes | ||||
Interventions | There is a need for advanced interface designs
Future research should focus on using technology to effectively enhance the HCPs and patients’ ability to detect discrepancies in medication |
Use of critical pathways to improve patient outcome | The study implies that a PSH model is an effective way of improving operational outcomes in surgery for THA and TKA patients | Using the ePAQ-PO can lead to significant reduction in the time spent during assessment without affecting the patients’ satisfaction rates | Future research should focus on the effect of involving pharmacy technicians during medication reconciliation |
Table 2
Primary Research Evidence
Citation | Question or Hypothesis | Research Design (include tools) and Sample Size | Key Findings | Recommendations/
Implications |
Level of Evidence |
Russ, A. L., Jahn, M. A., Patel, H., Porter, B. W., Nguyen, K. A., Zillich, A. J., … Simon, S. (2018). Usability evaluation of a medication reconciliation tool: Embedding safety probes to assess users’ detection of medication discrepancies. Journal of Biomedical Informatics, 82, 178–186 | The study aimed at determining the efficacy of using usability probes in evaluating the usability of a previously developed electronic medication reconciliation tool. The article describes how using safety probes can help assess the efficacy of a tool in determining medication incongruities. | Research Design: Mixed-method design
Sample Size: A convenience sample of 20 healthcare professionals and 10 patients was used
Data Analysis: Descriptive statistics
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≤50% of HCPs were able to detect the safety probes
Patients had a higher rate of detecting the discrepancies
Combined, the HCPs and the patients could detect 44.8% of the safety probes
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There is a need for advanced interface designs
Future research should focus on using technology to effectively enhance the HCPs and patients’ ability to detect discrepancies in medication |
SORT 2 |
Friedman, S. (2018). Can Standardizing CABG care with clinical pathways reduce length of stay and hospital acquired infections? Seton Hall University DNP Final Projects. 25. | To develop and initiate a CABG clinical pathway that lower differences in care to enhance quality of services and improve patient outcomes for the patients
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Research tools: Tableau®, Premier, CAHPS
Sample: Registered nurses and patients in the health facility where the pathway was implemented
Data Analysis: Conducted by the Tableau® and CAHPS programs for the LOS and HIA respectively |
Immediately after the implementation of the pathway, the patient outcomes improved considerably
The outcomes went back to baseline after two months due to reduction in momentum |
The researcher recommends initiation of prophylactic treatment of atrial fibrillation and fast track extubation to reduce the length of stay further. | |
Vetter, T. R., Barman, J., Hunter, J. M., Jones, K. A., &Pittet, J. F. (2017). The effect of the implementation of preoperative and postoperative care elements of a perioperative surgical home model on outcomes in patients undergoing hip arthroplasty or knee arthroplasty. Anesthesia & Analgesia, 124(5), 1450-1458. | To evaluate the link between the preoperative and postoperative aspects of an initial PSH model and patient outcomes and financial/operative outcomes for THA or TKA patients | Research design: Retrospective observational design
Sample size: 1225 pre-PSH and 1363 post-PSH participants
Data Analysis: Conventional inferential statistical tests such as regression modeling |
The pre-PSH group recorded 7.2% improvement in on-time starts during surgery, 5.8% reduction in anesthesia-related delays during surgery, and 2.2% reduction in the rate of ICU admission.
The post-PSH group reports a $432 and $601 reduction in non-surgery costs for THA and TKA patients respectively |
The study implies that a PSH model is an effective way of improving operational outcomes in surgery for THA and TKA patients | |
Taylor, S. Andrzejowski, J. Wiles, M. Bland, S. Jones, G. & Radley, S. (2018). A prospective observational study of the impact of an electronic questionnaire (ePAQ-PO) on the duration of nurse-led pre-operative assessment and patient satisfaction. PLoS One. 13(10)
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Evaluating the impact of ePAQ-PO on patient satisfaction and nurse consultation times in low-risk patients | Study design: Prospective observational study
Sample size: 86 patients; 43 in ePAQ-PO group and 43 in standard group |
The ePAQ-PO group recorded a shorter consultation time
Both groups were equally satisfied in the services |
Using the ePAQ-PO can lead to significant reduction in the time spent during assessment without affecting the patients’ satisfaction rates |
Legend: HCPs- Healthcare Professionals; SORT- Strength of Recommendation Taxonomy; CABG- Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting; LOS- Length of Stay; HIA-Hospital Acquired Infection; THA- Total hip arthroplasty; TKA- Total knee arthroplasty; ePAQ-PO- electronic pre-operative assessment questionnaire.
- Change model
- Rationale
- Application of phases to your setting
- Please use change model below
Kotter (1995)
Process for Leading Change·Establish a sense of urgency·Form a powerful guiding coalition·Create a vision·Communicate a vision·Empower others to act on the vision·Plan for and create short-term wins·Consolidate improvements and produce still more change·Institutionalize new approaches
adapted from: Dennison. R. D. (2013). Pass CCRN!, 4th ed. Elsevier, St. Louis, MO
- Consistency between outcome, data collection, tool, variable, and test
- Collection
- What are you measuring: Outcome(s)
- How are you measuring your outcome: Data collection tool
- In which groups are you measuring: Design
- When are you measuring: Time of collection.
- Who is measuring: Source owner
- Evaluation
- Identification of dependent outcome Variable(s) with level of measurement(CTRL & click to follow link)
- Data analysis/ test(s)