5 years ago

Type of oral solid medication packaging and medication preparation time in nursing homes: A direct observation study

Type of oral solid medication packaging and medication preparation time in nursing homes: A direct observation study
C. M. Cready, K. Dreyer, C. Hudson
What is known and objective Medication administration is a substantial portion of the workday in nursing homes, with the medication preparation step being the most time-consuming. However, little is known about how medication preparation time is affected by the type of packaging used for oral solid medications (ie, tablets/capsules). We examined the effects of two types of packaging. As fewer steps are associated with strip packaging compared to bingo card packaging, we hypothesized that the increase in medication preparation seconds per resident with each additional oral solid medication would be smaller when strip packaging was used. Methods A total of 430 medication preparations conducted by eight nurses during the regularly scheduled morning medication administration period in two nursing homes—using strip packaging and bingo card packaging, respectively—were observed. Each medication preparation observation was matched to its corresponding medication administration record and observations averaged across resident. Using the resident sample (N=149), we estimated three regression models (adjusting the standard errors for the clustering of resident by nurse). The first model regressed medication preparation seconds on the number of oral solid medications. The second model added the type of packaging used and the control variables (type of unit [long-term care, post-acute care], the number of one-half pills and the dosage form diversity in the preparation). To test our hypothesis, the third model added an interaction term between the number of oral solid medications and the type of packaging used. Results and discussion As hypothesized, all else equal, the number of oral solid medications tended to increase medication preparation time per resident in both nursing homes, but the increase was smaller in the strip packaging nursing home (P<.05). Each additional oral solid medication in the bingo card packaging nursing home increased medication preparation by an average of 13 seconds (b=13.077), whereas each oral solid medication administered in the strip packaging nursing home increased medication preparation by an average of only 8 seconds (13.077−5.092=7.985). This is a difference on average of about 5 seconds per oral solid medication. What is new and conclusion To our knowledge, we were the first to examine the effect of type of oral solid medication packaging on medication preparation time in nursing homes. Type of packaging matters. The time saved using strip packaging (vs bingo card packaging) has implications for quality of care and the movement towards person-centred care in the nursing home sector. Nurses (or other staff tasked with medication preparation) in nursing homes using strip packaging potentially have more time to devote to nurturing a relationship with the resident. However, time saved in medication preparation by strip packaging is counterproductive if a serious error results. Thus, future studies should investigate the effects of type of packaging on medication preparation errors. Medication administration is a big part of the workday in nursing homes, with the medication preparation step being the most time consuming. The current study found that time spent preparing medications is affected by the type of packaging used for oral solid medications (bingo card vs strip). All else equal, each additional oral solid medication tended to increase medication preparation seconds per resident in both the bingo card and strip packaging nursing homes, but the increase was smaller in the strip packaging home.

Publisher URL: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/resolve/doi

DOI: 10.1111/jcpt.12567

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