Medication Safety During Transitions of Care: The Importance of Checklists in Preventing Patient Harm

There is a need to optimize patient safety as patients navigate through the healthcare system. With each transition of care, patients are vulnerable to changes that may cause adverse effects, including changes in their healthcare team, health status, and medications. The Centers for Medicare &...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Laressa Bethishou, Olivia Lounsbury, Donna Prosser
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Patient Safety Authority 2020-06-01
Series:Patient Safety
Online Access:https://patientsafetyj.com/index.php/patientsaf/article/view/273
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spelling doaj-8b42b9ecf0614870bb670f2a293373e62021-05-05T11:11:21ZengPatient Safety AuthorityPatient Safety2641-47162020-06-0122Medication Safety During Transitions of Care: The Importance of Checklists in Preventing Patient HarmLaressa Bethishou0Olivia Lounsbury 1Donna Prosser2Chapman University School of PharmacyPatient Safety Movement FoundationPatient Safety Movement Foundation There is a need to optimize patient safety as patients navigate through the healthcare system. With each transition of care, patients are vulnerable to changes that may cause adverse effects, including changes in their healthcare team, health status, and medications. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) defines a transition of care as “the movement of a patient from one setting of care to another.” While the concept itself may seem simple, this definition fails to capture the many potential handoff complications which classify these transitions as high risk for patients. With 67% of patients facing unintended medication discrepancies in the hospital and more than 40% of medication reconciliation errors resulting from miscommunications in handoffs, medication safety has become a leading priority for patients and caregivers. The World Health Organization articulated the need to improve communication specifically during points of transition. Differences in communication styles, distracting environments, and the lack of standardization are the primary factors contributing to the 80% of medical errors resulting from transitional miscommunication. https://patientsafetyj.com/index.php/patientsaf/article/view/273
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laressa Bethishou
Olivia Lounsbury
Donna Prosser
spellingShingle Laressa Bethishou
Olivia Lounsbury
Donna Prosser
Medication Safety During Transitions of Care: The Importance of Checklists in Preventing Patient Harm
Patient Safety
author_facet Laressa Bethishou
Olivia Lounsbury
Donna Prosser
author_sort Laressa Bethishou
title Medication Safety During Transitions of Care: The Importance of Checklists in Preventing Patient Harm
title_short Medication Safety During Transitions of Care: The Importance of Checklists in Preventing Patient Harm
title_full Medication Safety During Transitions of Care: The Importance of Checklists in Preventing Patient Harm
title_fullStr Medication Safety During Transitions of Care: The Importance of Checklists in Preventing Patient Harm
title_full_unstemmed Medication Safety During Transitions of Care: The Importance of Checklists in Preventing Patient Harm
title_sort medication safety during transitions of care: the importance of checklists in preventing patient harm
publisher Patient Safety Authority
series Patient Safety
issn 2641-4716
publishDate 2020-06-01
description There is a need to optimize patient safety as patients navigate through the healthcare system. With each transition of care, patients are vulnerable to changes that may cause adverse effects, including changes in their healthcare team, health status, and medications. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) defines a transition of care as “the movement of a patient from one setting of care to another.” While the concept itself may seem simple, this definition fails to capture the many potential handoff complications which classify these transitions as high risk for patients. With 67% of patients facing unintended medication discrepancies in the hospital and more than 40% of medication reconciliation errors resulting from miscommunications in handoffs, medication safety has become a leading priority for patients and caregivers. The World Health Organization articulated the need to improve communication specifically during points of transition. Differences in communication styles, distracting environments, and the lack of standardization are the primary factors contributing to the 80% of medical errors resulting from transitional miscommunication.
url https://patientsafetyj.com/index.php/patientsaf/article/view/273
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