Using risk analysis to anticipate and mitigate failures during a hospital pharmacy relocation.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_5D153BA6C210
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Using risk analysis to anticipate and mitigate failures during a hospital pharmacy relocation.
Journal
European journal of hospital pharmacy
Author(s)
Schumacher L., Dobrinas M., Krähenbühl S., Pasteur C., Borlat M.L., Rouiller F., Blanc A.L., Widmer N., Blatrie C.
ISSN
2047-9956 (Print)
ISSN-L
2047-9956
Publication state
Published
Issued date
11/2021
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
28
Number
Suppl 2
Pages
e164-e170
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Documented experiences of relocating hospital pharmacies are rare, but adequate preparation is vital to ensuring smooth pharmacy operation and patient safety. In the autumn of 2019, the Pharmacy of Eastern Vaud Hospitals, composed of four units (Logistics, Manufacturing, Clinical Pharmacy, and Nursing Home Supply), was relocated to a new hospital in just a few days. In this context, a failure modes, effects and criticality analysis (FMECA) was carried out before the relocation in order to anticipate any failure modes likely to affect the pharmacy's missions or patient safety during the move.
The FMECA was performed by a multidisciplinary team (pharmacists and logisticians) which analysed the complete upcoming process of relocating the pharmacy and its implications. Criticality indices (CIs) were defined based on the matrix developed by Williams et al, which sets a maximum score of 810. Every potential failure mode identified was analysed, and mitigation measures were proposed for each one.
The analysis identified 86 potential failures. The mean initial CI calculated for the entire pharmacy relocation was 177 (min 4-max 567), but this was estimated to be reduced to 39 (-78%) after mitigation measures were identified. Within the whole pharmacy, the failures with the highest CIs were identified in the Logistics unit. Among these, the time necessary to transfer the pharmacy's drugs from their traditional alphabetical storage location to their new location using robotic, chaotic storage principles was identified as the riskiest potential failure. Indeed, the rapid availability of emergency medicines would have to be guaranteed at all times.
The present study highlighted the relevance of using an FMECA-type evaluation to anticipate the impact of a hospital pharmacy relocation. This tool enabled pharmacy professionals to structure their potential relocation problems and reflect on mitigation measures in order to provide concerted, realistically applicable solutions before the move.
Keywords
Humans, Pharmacists, Pharmacy, Pharmacy Service, Hospital, Risk Assessment, hospital, medication systems, pharmacy service, quality of health care, safety, total quality management
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
19/03/2021 0:02
Last modification date
27/03/2023 8:38
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