학술논문

P32 Pre-go-live simulation testing of new electronic prescribing systems in a specialist paediatric hospital
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Archives of Disease in Childhood. Feb 01, 2018 103(2):e2-e2
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0003-9888
Abstract
AIM: Single-site cross-sectional evaluation of a specialist paediatric hospital electronic clinical systems designed to support the medication process. This included simulation testing and evaluation of three electronic systems: PICS an electronic prescribing system designed in an adult hospital and being adapted for paediatric use; BDD an in-development electronic drug dictionary database that will serve as a clinical decision support tool; and Ascribe the existing pharmacy dispensing and management system (used to provide target levels). Simulation testing is used to assess the utility of the systems in the local (paediatric hospital) setting and gauge readiness for use in the live environment. METHODS: Unique drug regimens from consecutive hand written outpatient pharmacy prescriptions and the hepatology ward paper drug charts were harvested and used as the simulation test. Each regimen was therefore in current use at the study site. The test prescriptions were used to identify each systems’ ability to accommodate that regimen, such that:The system tests were undertaken in early July 2015 following suitable training on how to use each of the three systems. Trained researchers attempted to enter the regimens into PICs and Ascribe; and to identify if the regimens were available within the BDD database.Approval was granted by the study site, and Aston University Ethics Committee. RESULTS: Outpatients (89 unique regimens)Hepatology ward – (126 unique regimens) CONCLUSION: Overall, at the time of testing, the electronic prescribing system (PICS) could accommodate approximately 72% of drug regimens, the BDD database could accommodate approximately 51% – compared to the Ascribe (target figure) of 87%. The findings suggest that further work is required to ensure the systems in development (PICS and BDD) are ready for use.