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Technology & Automation In Pharmacy – Part 2

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Technology & Automation In Pharmacy – Part 2

Automated dispensing devices (ADD)◦ ADD requirements◦ Examples of ADDs

Bar code enabled medication administration

Becoming a pharmacy informaticist

Role of the pharmacy informaticist

Outline

ADDs are drug storage devices or cabinets that electronically dispense medications in a controlled fashion and track medication use

ADDs are located in hospital patient care units, surgical suites, emergency rooms, long-term-care facilities, physicians’ offices, and other settings

Automated Dispensing Devices (ADDs)

These automated dispensing systems can be stocked by centralized or decentralized pharmacies

Centralized pharmacies prepare and distribute medications from a central location within the hospital

Decentralized pharmacies reside on nursing units or wards, with a single decentralized pharmacy often serving several units or wards

These decentralized pharmacies usually receive their medication stock and supplies from the hospital’ s central pharmacy

ADDs

Medications are contained in, and administered from, single-unit or unit-dose packages

Medications are dispensed in ready-to-administer form to the extent possible

Medications are available for administration to the patient only at the time at which they are to be administered, according to the institution’s policy

ADDs Requirements

ASHP. Am J Health-Syst Pharm.2010; 67:483-90

An electronic patient medication profile is concurrently maintained in the pharmacy for each patient and made easily accessible to the pharmacist

Medications are accessible to different categories of health care professionals with the ability to limit access based on policy or law

ADDs Requirements - Cont’d

ASHP. Am J Health-Syst Pharm.2010; 67:483-90

Small systems:◦Pyxis medstation◦Baxter ATC◦Script-pro 200

Large systems:◦Baker cells◦Baxter international

ADDs Examples

The Pyxis Medstation, Medstation Rx, and Medstation Rx 1000

Are automated dispensing devices kept on the nursing unit

These machines are often compared to automatic teller machines (ATMs)

The Pyxis Medstation, Medstation Rx, and Medstation Rx 1000

The Medstation interfaces with the pharmacy computer

Physicians’ orders are entered into the pharmacy computer and then transferred to the Medstation where patient profiles are displayed to the nurse who accesses the medications for verified orders

Each nurse is provided with a password that must be used to access the Medstation

The Pyxis Medstation, Medstation Rx, and Medstation Rx 1000

Many Pyxis MedStations are configured with a medication profile for each patient

When selecting a patient, only active medication orders that have been reviewed by the pharmacy can be accessed at the MedStation

The Pyxis Medstation, Medstation Rx, and Medstation Rx 1000

Certain MedStations do not have patient profiles available:◦ Medications are removed by selecting the necessary

medication◦ Non-profile units include the Emergency Department,

Radiology, and Surgery

The Pyxis Medstation, Medstation Rx, and Medstation Rx 1000

Pharmacists or technicians keep these units loaded with medication. Charges are made automatically for drugs dispensed by the unit

Earlier models had sufficient memory to contain data for about one week, and newer models can store data for longer periods

Advantages of the Pyxis® System

1. Nursing staff are guided to the correct drawer and pocket to access required medicine. Medicines which sound similar or have multiple strengths are loaded indifferent drawers of the machine

2. Access is restricted to only one drawer/door at a time

3. Ward stock levels are monitored by the pharmacy computer and stocks topped up before drugs run out, reducing delay to patients and staff frustration

4. Management of controlled medication

Advantages of the Pyxis® System

5. Possible to add additional safety features for individual high risk drugs. For example,

◦ must be authorized by two staff members◦ soft lock outs to prevent duplicate administrations

(reduces risk of multiple administrations when staff forget to sign for medications)

6. Advice given or required information recorded at time of dose removal

Advantages of the Pyxis® System7. Use of profile mode enables constant monitoring

by pharmacist of drug dosages/interactions. It also reduces the amount of interpretation required by nursing staff at time of dose removal

8. Real time data collection for drug usage which can be advantageous for audit and other quality improvement processes

Disadvantages of the Pyxis® System

1. May be frustrating to get drugs in an emergency

2. Requires additional staff training and technical help

3. Downtime, system failure and inflexibility

4. Cost and space issues

The Baxter ATC-212 Dispensing System

Uses a microcomputer to pack unit- dose tablets and capsules for oral administration

It is usually installed at the pharmacy

The Baxter ATC-212 Dispensing System

Medications are stored in calibrated canisters that are designed specifically for each medication

Canisters are assigned a numbered location, which is thought to reduce mix-up errors upon dispensing. When an order is sent to the microcomputer, a tablet is dispensed from a particular canister

The drug is ejected into a strip-packing device where it is labeled and sealed

ScriptPro 200

Installed in the pharmacy Contains 200 universal dispensing cells and

three vial dispensers Fills vials directly from dispensing cells Prints prescription and auxiliary labels

Baker cells

Installed in the pharmacy Counts a 30-count vial in 3-5 seconds When a prescription is dispensed,

information is sent to the Baker Cell. The Baker Cell counts the correct number of units of the medication

Are inventory control systems that uses barcodes to prevent human errors in the distribution of prescription medications at hospitals

The goal of BCMA is to make sure that patients are receiving the correct medications at the correct time by electronically validating and documenting medications

Bar Code Enabled Medication Administration Technology (BCMA)

It ensures adherence to the “5 Rights” of medication administration ◦ Right Patient, ◦ Right Route, ◦ Right Dose, ◦ Right Time,◦ Right Medication

It visually alerts staff when the proper parameters are not met

Bar Code Enabled Medication Administration Technology (BCMA)

Stocking of inventory both in pharmacy & in other locations from which medications may be dispensed (e.g. automated dispensing device)

Manual packaging of oral solid and liquid medications

Compounding, repackaging, and labeling processes (e.g., scanning of source ingredients)

When Should BCMA Be Used?

Retrieving medications from automated dispensing devices

Dispensing from the pharmacy to any location

When Should BCMA Be Used?

BCMA

A. Patient name B. Medication name and strengths C. Time of administration D. Bar code for bedside scanning

BCMA at Bedside

Bar codes mismatch with drug, dose and patient at times

Bar code sometimes function erroneously Unable to scan bar codes properly at times Unreadable bar codes Time consuming

Disadvantages of BCMA

The typical pharmacy informaticist is a pharmacist who has knowledge of:◦ computer systems◦ medication-use processes ◦ safety issues◦ clinical management of medications◦ drug distribution, and administration

AND

Has developed extensive expertise in using technology to support these activities.

Pharmacy Informaticist

ASHP. Am J Health-Syst Pharm. 2007;64:200–3.

Three options are available:◦ Take specific courses or obtain a degree in computer

science, information systems or business information technology

◦ Complete an advanced residency

◦ Volunteer to assume an informatics role at one’s current place of employment by: Volunteering to take responsibility in aspects of informatics Obtaining as much on-the-job experience as possible Attending courses, conferences & learning form colleagues

Becoming A Pharmacy Informaticist

Work closely with information systems and pharmacy staff to develop system programming requirements

Develop and oversee databases related to medication management systems

Identify, suggest solutions to, and resolve system or application problems

Role of the Pharmacy Informaticist

Assess medication-use systems for vulnerabilities to medication errors and implement medication-error prevention strategies

Assist in mining, aggregating, analyzing, and interpreting data from clinical information systems to improve patient outcomes

Collaborate with other health care technology and clinical leaders to ensure that medication-related systems support safe and effective medication use

Role of the Pharmacy Informaticist

Training pharmacy staff in the use of medication- related computer systems

Performing research to expand informatics knowledge and its use in supporting patient care

Role of the Pharmacy Informaticist