Improving Utilization of a Nursing-Initiated Supportive Medication Order Panel in the Inpatient Setting
- PMID: 37820242
- DOI: 10.1097/JHQ.0000000000000409
Improving Utilization of a Nursing-Initiated Supportive Medication Order Panel in the Inpatient Setting
Abstract
Background: Many medications are low-risk but must undergo the same ordering process as high-risk medications in the inpatient setting. Nurses identify the need for supportive medications and notify providers. An order panel and policy were developed to allow nurses to order low-risk, supportive medications.
Purpose: The aim of this study was to increase order panel utilization from a 6% to a goal of 15%.
Methods: This was a quality improvement study at a 1000-bed academic medical center. Five plan-do-study-act (PDSA) cycles were implemented. The primary end point was order panel utilization, and secondary end points were individual nursing unit utilization and the number of orders for each medication on the panel.
Results: After each PDSA cycle, order panel utilization improved to 7.8%, 13.2%, 7.5%, 10.2%, and 10.6%, respectively. The units using the order panel most often were general medicine (n = 95, 28%), medical intensive care (n = 71, 21%), and inpatient oncology (n = 40, 12%). The medication most frequently ordered was lanolin alcohols-mineral oil with petrolatum (Eucerin) cream (n = 220, 28%).
Conclusions: Order panel utilization improved from a baseline of 6% to an average of 9.9%. Increasing awareness of the order panel and adding medications will contribute to improvement in order panel utilization in the long-term.
Copyright © 2024 National Association for Healthcare Quality.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
References
-
- Chaiyachati KH, Shea JA, Asch DA, et al. Assessment of inpatient time allocation among first-year internal medicine residents using time-motion observations. JAMA Intern Med. 2019;179(6):760-767.
-
- Wang JK, Ouyang D, Hom J, Chi J, Chen JH. Characterizing electronic health record usage patterns of inpatient medicine residents using event log data. PLoS ONE. 2019;14(2):e0205379.
-
- Pinevich Y, Clark KJ, Harrison AM, Pickering BW, Herasevich V. Interaction time with electronic health records: A systematic review. Appl Clin Inform. 2021;12(04):788-799.
-
- Fielding S, Slovic P, Johnston M, Lee AJ, Bond CM, Watson MC. Public risk perception of non-prescription medicines and information disclosure during consultations: A suitable target for intervention? Int J Pharm Pract. 2018;26(5):423-432.
-
- Kishel JJ, Maguire M, Pankratz L, Julian K. Implementing an electronically based, nurse-driven pneumococcal vaccination protocol for inpatients. Am J Health-System Pharm. 2009;66(14):1304-1308.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
