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J Am Med Inform Assoc 2008;15:408-423 doi:10.1197/jamia.M2616
  • Focus on Safe e-Prescribing
  • Technology Evaluation

Workarounds to Barcode Medication Administration Systems: Their Occurrences, Causes, and Threats to Patient Safety

  1. Ross Koppela,
  2. Tosha Wetterneckb,
  3. Joel Leon Tellesc,
  4. Ben-Tzion Karshd
  1. aCenter for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Medicine, Sociology Department, University of Pennsylvania, Madison, WI
  2. bDepartment of Medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI
  3. cDepartment of Clinical Information, Safety and Quality Affairs, Main Line Health System, Bryn Mawr, PA
  4. dDepartment of Industrial and Systems Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI
  1. Correspondence: Dr. Ross Koppel, Sociology Department, McNeil Building, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, 19104 (Email: <rkoppel{at}sas.upenn.edu>)
  • Received 12 September 2007
  • Accepted 16 April 2008

Abstract

The authors develop a typology of clinicians' workarounds when using barcoded medication administration (BCMA) systems. Authors then identify the causes and possible consequences of each workaround. The BCMAs usually consist of handheld devices for scanning machine-readable barcodes on patients and medications. They also interface with electronic medication administration records. Ideally, BCMAs help confirm the five “rights” of medication administration: right patient, drug, dose, route, and time. While BCMAs are reported to reduce medication administration errors—the least likely medication error to be intercepted— these claims have not been clearly demonstrated. The authors studied BCMA use at five hospitals by: (1) observing and shadowing nurses using BCMAs at two hospitals, (2) interviewing staff and hospital leaders at five hospitals, (3) participating in BCMA staff meetings, (4) participating in one hospital's failure-mode-and-effects analyses, (5) analyzing BCMA override log data. The authors identified 15 types of workarounds, including, for example, affixing patient identification barcodes to computer carts, scanners, doorjambs, or nurses' belt rings; carrying several patients' prescanned medications on carts. The authors identified 31 types of causes of workarounds, such as unreadable medication barcodes (crinkled, smudged, torn, missing, covered by another label); malfunctioning scanners; unreadable or missing patient identification wristbands (chewed, soaked, missing); nonbarcoded medications; failing batteries; uncertain wireless connectivity; emergencies. The authors found nurses overrode BCMA alerts for 4.2% of patients charted and for 10.3% of medications charted. Possible consequences of the workarounds include wrong administration of medications, wrong doses, wrong times, and wrong formulations. Shortcomings in BCMAs' design, implementation, and workflow integration encourage workarounds. Integrating BCMAs within real-world clinical workflows requires attention to in situ use to ensure safety features' correct use.

Footnotes

  • Supported in part by a grant from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), P01 HS11530-01, Improving Patient Safety Through Reduction in Medication Errors (RK), AHRQ Grant 1-UC1 HS014253-01 (TW) and a Clinical Research Scholar Award from the National Institutes of Health (1 K12-RR01764-01) (TW).

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