Dispensing Errors – Dispensing Process This audit is concerned with risk management of primary dispensing errors i.e. those that occur during the dispensing process, rather than those that occur outside of the pharmacy either as a result of the prescribing process, or as a result of administration. The audit is designed to encourage greater awareness amongst staff working in the dispensary of the stages in dispensing when errors are most likely to occur, the types of errors that are most likely to occur, and the circumstances when they are more likely to occur. It is important to realise that the audit will not identify who makes the most errors. It has been found from piloting the audit that it is not possible to compare the rates of errors either between staff or between pharmacies. This is because the vigilance of the recording of the errors tends to vary between staff and between pharmacies and this will skew any results. The audit will enable pharmacists and their staff to learn from potential dispensing errors and understand when they are more likely to make mistakes. This has been shown to reduce the number of potential errors that occur. The audit process allows staff to reflect on current practice and to design and adopt policies and practices that minimise risk. Staff must be made aware that the audit is not about disciplinary matters but about learning from our practice and improving how we do things. Experience from piloting of this audit has shown the following. The interesting data to be found is in the possible causes of errors and the factors affecting the error. Causes of errors The things that one might expect to see would be the issues over similar packaging or similar names and issues over picking up the drug next to the proper medicine. However, these were not the main problems. The most frequent cause of mistake was misreading the prescription. This was usually due to human error and poor handwriting was only highlighted in a very few cases. The major causes of problems were typing/computer errors and misreading prescriptions. The typing/computer errors include typing mistakes, incorrect selection form the computer and using the previous drug/dose on PMR. These are errors that are directly related to how people use the PMR and how carefully they check the details before they press return. The misreading of prescriptions may be a problem of thoroughness and speed and may be due to the speeding and the volume of prescriptions. The errors to do with similar drug names or similar packaging were significant but not as frequent as might be expected. These, however, are the ones that you can do something about. Picking errors, i.e. picking the next medicine on the shelf or a medicine being in the wrong place, were not that frequent. This is something that one can take precautions over such as separating similarly packed drugs from each other. It was interesting that poor prescribing in terms of handwriting or ambiguous directions are relatively rare problems. Factors affecting the error The most common factors affecting the error are to do with being busier than normal or interruptions. If you combine the factors that could describe how busy the pharmacy is (busier than normal and less staff than normal), it was clear that being busier then normal is the biggest factor. There is little that one can do about being busy except be aware that you might make mistakes. Interruptions are the next biggest factor (telephone interruption, busy counter business, query from member of staff, etc.). This is predictable, but it is surprising how many pharmacists will attempt to keep dispensing when they are on the phone, etc. The lesson from this is to either delegate answering the phone, etc. or to stop dispensing while dealing with an interruption. There are other categories that are worth highlighting as well. About 10% of errors occurred when the pharmacy was less busy than normal. This is a finding that surprised us when we did the piloting of this audit. It may be that when things are quiet the pharmacist is more relaxed and not concentrating as much. The factors relating to new or unusual staff are also significant, because this will apply to new staff and locums, etc. It does not imply that locums or new staff are poor quality just that they are not used to the pharmacy and therefore have added pressures. The final point is the time of day problem. In piloting, about 5% of errors listed this as a possible cause. This might be first thing in the morning for some people or last thing at night for others. Individuals need to realise that they will perform differently at different times of day and make allowances for this. Aims and Objectives • • • • • • • To describe errors that occur during the dispensing process to support risk management To identify and address stage/s in the dispensing process when errors most commonly occur To review the frequency of errors made during the dispensing process To identify and address common types of dispensing errors that occur To identify and address common causes of dispensing errors that occur To identify and address factors or circumstances that are associated with the occurrence of dispensing errors To identify appropriate preventative action in response to dispensing errors Criteria • • • • • • Full details of errors occurring during the dispensing process should be recorded Pharmacists and their staff should be aware of the stage/s of dispensing when errors most commonly occur Pharmacists and their staff should be aware of the type/s of errors that most commonly occur Pharmacists and their staff should be aware of the causes of errors that most commonly occur Pharmacists and their staff should be aware of circumstances when dispensing errors most commonly occur Pharmacists and their staff should be made aware of the frequency with which they make errors Data Collection Data used: • Status of pharmacist on duty • Stage at which error detected • Person identifying error • Person/s making error • Type and nature of error • Possible cause of error • Circumstances associated with error • Date error occurred • Time error detected • Branch ID (for chains/multiples only) Completing the Audit Form Please report all errors, including those that you detect during the normal process of dispensing. Unsigned or illegal prescriptions should be included if they were dispensed or the dispensing process was started before the lack of a signature, etc was spotted. It is believed that we can learn from the errors that are detected during dispensing as well as those that get as far as the patient. These guidance notes give details about how to use the Dispensing Process Audit Form. Branch ID – If you are part of a multiple or group of pharmacies sharing results, you will need to complete this. Date and Time – please enter the date and time that the error took place. Contact name – please give the name of a contact in the store that was present when the error occurred. This is in case a follow up of the error is needed to get more details. Pharmacist on duty – please note the type of pharmacist on duty when the error occurred. Some of these categories may not apply to your pharmacy, but will apply in other pharmacies. Stage at which error detected – Did the patient or patient’s representative report the error, or did you detect it during your dispensing, checking or handing out procedure. Who found the error/Who made the error – these questions ask about how the error was discovered and the grade of staff who made the error. It is not important to know the names of the staff involved only their positions. Type of error – what type of error was made. This has been split into labelling errors, selection errors and bagging errors. A dispensing error may involve more than one type of error e.g. misreading a prescription written as Capoten 12.5mg and dispensing Capoten 25mg may involve an error in labelling and an error in selection. 1. Labelling Errors Wrong drug/form on label Wrong strength on label Wrong directions on label Wrong patient name on label Wrong quantity on label Wrong label on container 2. Selection Errors Wrong drug/form selected Wrong strength selected Wrong quantity counted 3. Bagging Errors Wrong name on bag Wrong address on bag Item omitted from bag Extra item in bag wrong drug name or form on label (e.g. ointment instead of cream) e.g. 25mg instead of 50mg on label e.g. one three times a day instead of One twice a day Do not include examples of spelling mistakes e.g. 28 tablets instead of 56 tablets on label Labels swapped with those belonging to another drug or patient Incorrect drug or form dispensed e.g. 25mg instead of 50mg dispensed e.g. 28 tablets instead of 56 tablets dispensed Do not include examples of spelling mistakes Do not include examples of spelling mistakes e.g. two items in bag instead of three items e.g. an extra item from another patient is included in the bag Brief description of the error Please give brief details about what the error was e.g. Amoxycillin 125mg/5mg prescribed, Amoxycillin 250mg/5mg dispensed Possible causes of error This is the most important piece of information that we need. What caused the mistake to happen? Here is a list of several possible causes of the error. This list is not exhaustive, so can be added to. The reason for the error may not be immediately obvious so think carefully about the real reason and if the reason is not known please state that. Drug Selection Similar drug name Similar packaging Picked next medicine on shelf Medicine in wrong place on shelf e.g. Zestril or Zocor e.g. generics that are similarly labelled and packaged Did you pick up the medicine that was next to the one you wanted on the shelf? Has a drug been put back in the wrong place e.g. ear drops on the eye drops shelf Prescription Poor handwriting on the Rx Ambiguous directions on the Rx Misread prescription Typing mistake Computer/Counter Incorrect drug selected Used previous drug/dose on PMR Labels swapped from same Rx Labels swapped from different Rxs Tablet counting error Other Was the prescription difficult to read? Were the directions on the prescription unclear? e.g. misread prescription quantity as 28 instead of 56 e.g. typing incorrect code into computer Selected wrong drug/form/strength from the list displayed on the computer. This is different to a typing error. Did you repeat the details from the patient’s last prescription on the PMR without noting any changes on the current prescription? Were the labels put on the wrong bottles but for the right patient? Were the labels put on a different person’s prescription? e.g. tablet counter was dusty and miscounted number of tablets Can you think of any other cause for the error? Please give us some details so that they can include it in the analysis Other factors affecting the error We all know that errors are more likely to occur when we are busier than normal or interrupted during dispensing. These are not the prime causes of the error, but could have contributed to it. We would like to identify any factors that are felt may have contributed to the error occurring. Here is a list. Busyness Busier/quieter than normal Time of day Staffing Less staff than usual Not usual pharmacist/dispenser Was the pharmacy busier or quieter than normal? Did the mistake happen as you were about to close or just after you opened, etc? Were there fewer staff than normally man the pharmacy? Were some of the usual dispensary staff absent? Distractions Telephone interruption Staff query Customer/patient query Busy OTC trade Other Did you have to answer the phone while you were dispensing? Were you interrupted during dispensing by a query from a member of staff? Were you interrupted during dispensing by a query from a customer/patient? Were customers waiting to see you or asking you questions? Can you think of any other factors affecting the error? Please give us some details so that they can include it in the analysis Instructions Suggested duration of audit: 1 month (Follow up on outcomes may continue for longer) Scripts to be included: All NHS and private scripts Standards Set Based on evidence of risk and your own professional judgement • _______ % of error forms contain full details • _______ staff are aware of the stage/s at which dispensing errors most commonly occur • _______ staff are aware of the type/s of dispensing errors that most commonly occur • _______ staff are aware of the cause/s of dispensing errors that most commonly occur • _______ staff are aware of the circumstance/s when dispensing errors most commonly occur • _______ staff are aware of the frequency with which they are involved in errors Action Points Although this audit is based o the available evidence, your actions, will, to some extent, need to reflect your working environment. Based on the information gathered in preparation for this audit list any amendments to the suggested action points and / outcomes shown on the data collection form as well as recording them in the box below. Collect data To help you familiarise yourself with the data collection form the accompanying chart provides descriptions of the information that is required. The form can be adapted to reflect action points identified and/or outcomes that are more suited to the practice. Use one form per incident. Keep the forms close to the dispensary so that all the staff can find them easily when an error is detected. Transfer data Transfer information from the data collection forms to the results table. Data Analysis The analysis for this audit consists of simple ranking. Potential Benefits Pharmacists Feedback on common dispensing errors Support to address common causes Demonstration of good practice Ability to support dispensing staff Pharmacy Dispensing Staff Feedback on common dispensing errors Improved training Patients Reliable high quality service Superintendent Demonstration of good practice Risk management Ability to address avoidable causes of dispensing errors Overview of dispensing process Ability to monitor trends in dispensing errors Results Total number of items dispensed during audit period : _________________ Pharmacist on duty No. of 1o dispensing errors Ranked (most common = 1) Area manager Branch Manager/Proprietor District manager Second pharmacist Relief pharmacist Locum pharmacist Errors most commonly occur when the duty pharmacist is ___________ Stage at which error detected Labelling Dispensing Final check Bagging up Handing out Patient/representative Other (give details below) No. of 1o dispensing errors Ranked (most common = 1) Errors are most commonly detected at the _______________ stage of the dispensing process Person finding error No. of 1o dispensing errors Ranked (most common = 1) Pharmacist Dispenser Counter assistant Pre-reg pharmacist Patient/representative The person most likely to find errors is ___________________________ Person/s making error No. of 1o dispensing errors Ranked (most common = 1) Pharmacist Dispenser Counter assistant Pre-reg pharmacist The grade of staff most likely to make errors _______________________ Type of error No. of 1o dispensing errors Ranked (most common = 1) Labelling Selection Bagging The most common type of error is ___________________ Of these the following particular problems occur most frequently Possible cause of error No. of 1o dispensing errors Ranked (most common = 1) Drug selection Prescription Computer/counter The most common possible cause of error is ______________________ Of these the following particular causes occur most frequently Circumstances associated with error Business Staffing Distractions No. of 1o dispensing errors Ranked (most common = 1) The most common circumstances associated with error is ____________ Of these the following particular circumstances occur most frequently Summary of findings The audit was carried out between __________ and ______________ ___________ staff were involved in the audit During this time _______ prescriptions were dispensed Errors most commonly occur when the duty pharmacist is ___________ (status) Errors are most commonly detected at _____________ stage of the dispensing errors The person most likely to find errors is ____________ (job title) The grade of staff most likely to make errors is __________ (job title) The most common type of error is ______________________ →Of these the following particular problems occur most frequently The most common possible cause of error is ____________________ →Of these the following particular causes occur most frequently The most common circumstance associated with error is ______________ →Of these the following particular circumstances occur most frequently