ASHP National Survey finds Bar-code-assisted Medication Administration was used in 50% of hospitals

April 19, 2012 | In: Reference Materials

ASHP national survey of pharmacy practice in hospital settings: Dispensing and administration—2011

  1. Craig A. Pedersen,
  2. Philip J. Schneider and
  3. Douglas J. Scheckelhoff
Craig A. Pedersen, B.S.Pharm., Ph.D., FAPhA, is Manager, Pharmacy Services, Valley General Hospital, Monroe, WA. Philip J. Schneider, M.S., FASHP, FASPEN, FFIP, is Professor and Associate Dean, College of Pharmacy at the Phoenix Biomedical Campus, University of Arizona, Phoenix. Douglas J. Scheckelhoff, M.S., FASHP, is VicePresident, Professional Development, American Society of HealthSystem Pharmacists, Bethesda, MD. Address correspondence to Dr. Pedersen at Valley General Hospital, 14701 179th Avenue SE, Monroe, WA (pedersen.craig@gmail.com).

Abstract

Purpose Results of the 2011 ASHP national survey of pharmacy practice in hospital settings that pertain to dispensing and administration are presented.

Methods A stratified random sample of pharmacy directors at 1401 general and children’s medical-surgical hospitals in the United States were surveyed by mail.

Results In this national probability sample survey, the response rate was 40.1%. Decentralization of the medication-use system continues, with 40% of hospitals using a decentralized system and 58% of hospitals planning to use a decentralized model in the future. Automated dispensing cabinets were used by 89% of hospitals, robots were used by 11%, carousels were used in 18%, and machine-readable coding was used in 34% of hospitals to verify doses before dispensing. Overall, 65% of hospitals had a United States Pharmacopeia chapter 797 compliant cleanroom for compounding sterile preparations. Medication administration records (MARs) have become increasingly computerized, with 67% of hospitals using electronic MARs. Bar-code-assisted medication administration was used in 50% of hospitals, and 68% of hospitals had smart infusion pumps. Health information is becoming more electronic, with 67% of hospitals having partially or completely implemented an electronic health record and 34% of hospitals having computerized prescriber order entry. The use of these technologies has substantially increased over the past year. The average number of full-time equivalent staff per 100 occupied beds averaged 17.5 for pharmacists and 15.0 for technicians. Directors of pharmacy reported declining vacancy rates for pharmacists.

Conclusion Pharmacists continue to improve medication use at the dispensing and administration steps of the medication-use system. The adoption of new technology is changing the philosophy of medication distribution, and health information is rapidly becoming electronic.

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