Chapter 38. Medication Reconciliation: Background
Chapter 38. Medication Reconciliation: Background
Chapter 38. Medication Reconciliation: Background
Medication Reconciliation
Jane H. Barnsteiner
Background
According to the Institute of Medicines Preventing Medication Errors report,1 the average
hospitalized patient is subject to at least one medication error per day. This confirms previous
research findings that medication errors represent the most common patient safety error.2 More
than 40 percent of medication errors are believed to result from inadequate reconciliation in
handoffs during admission, transfer, and discharge of patients.3 Of these errors, about 20 percent
are believed to result in harm.3, 4 Many of these errors would be averted if medication
reconciliation processes were in place.
Medication reconciliation is a formal process for creating the most complete and accurate list
possible of a patients current medications and comparing the list to those in the patient record or
medication orders. According to the Joint Commission5 (p. 1),
Medication reconciliation is the process of comparing a patient's medication
orders to all of the medications that the patient has been taking. This reconciliation
is done to avoid medication errors such as omissions, duplications, dosing errors,
or drug interactions. It should be done at every transition of care in which new
medications are ordered or existing orders are rewritten. Transitions in care
include changes in setting, service, practitioner, or level of care. This process
comprises five steps: (1) develop a list of current medications; (2) develop a list of
medications to be prescribed; (3) compare the medications on the two lists; (4)
make clinical decisions based on the comparison; and (5) communicate the new
list to appropriate caregivers and to the patient.
Recognizing vulnerabilities for medication errors, numerous efforts are underway to
encourage all health care providers and organizations to perform a medication reconciliation
process at various patient care transitions. The intent is to avoid errors of omission, duplication,
incorrect doses or timing, and adverse drug-drug or drug-disease interactions. The Joint
Commission added medication reconciliation across the care continuum as a National Patient
Safety Goal in 2005.6 The Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) has medication
reconciliation as part of its 100,000 Lives Campaign. This chapter reviews the evidence for
medication reconciliation and makes recommendations for nursing practice.
Medication Reconciliation
A comprehensive list of medications should include all prescription medications, herbals,
vitamins, nutritional supplements, over-the-counter drugs, vaccines, diagnostic and contrast
agents, radioactive medications, parenteral nutrition, blood derivatives, and intravenous solutions
(hereafter referred to collectively as medications).6 Over-the-counter drugs and dietary
supplements are not currently considered by many clinicians to be medications, and thus are
often not included in the medication record. As interactions can occur between prescribed
medication, over-the-counter medications, or dietary supplements, all medications and
2-459
supplements should be part of a patients medication history and included in the reconciliation
process.
The steps in medication reconciliation are seemingly straightforward.7 For a newly
hospitalized patient, the steps include obtaining and verifying the patients medication history,
documenting the patients medication history, writing orders for the hospital medication
regimen, and creating a medication administration record. At discharge, the steps include
determining the postdischarge medication regimen, developing discharge instructions for the
patient for home medications, educating the patient, and transmitting the medication list to the
followup physician. For patients in ambulatory settings, the main steps include documenting a
complete list of the current medications and then updating the list whenever medications are
added or changed.
However, the process of gathering, organizing, and communicating medication information
across the continuum of care is not straightforward. First, there is tremendous variation in the
process for gathering a patients medication history. Second, there are at least three disciplines
generally involved in the processmedicine, pharmacy, and nursingwith little agreement on
each professions role and responsibility for the reconciliation process. Third, there is often
duplication of data gathering with both nurses and physicians taking medication histories,
documenting them in different places in the chart, and rarely comparing and resolving any
discrepancies between the two histories.
Additionally, patient acuity may influence the process of reconciliation. For example, a
patient admitted for trauma may result in cursory data gathering about the medication history.
Alternatively, a patient with numerous comorbidities may stimulate gathering a more complete
list of current medications. In general, there is no standardization of the process of medication
reconciliation, which results in tremendous variation in the historical information gathered,
sources of information used, comprehensiveness of medication orders, and how information is
communicated to various providers across the continuum of care.7
2-460
Medication Reconciliation
In inpatient facilities, there are several situations where medication reconciliation is needed.
Generally, patients are admitted to the hospital for a specific procedure, such as surgery, or on an
urgent basis. When specialty health care providers are focused on the one component of care
related to the specific encounter and do not take a holistic view to other aspects of the patients
health care needs and practices, it is easy to overlook medications that may cause an adverse
event when combined with new medications or different dosages. Some of the patients daily
medications may be discontinued during a hospital stay, and when there is a lack of a formal
reconciliation process on discharge, the need to restart medications upon discharge may be
overlooked. One example would be discontinuing an anticoagulant during a hospital stay and
neglecting to restart it upon discharge. Another example is when orders from one unit of care
(such as intensive care) are discontinued and new orders are written when the patient moves to
another unit of care (such as a general care unit). The policy necessitating the rewriting of orders
makes it easy for the prescriber to overlook medications that may need to be reordered when no
formal medication reconciliation process is in place. These factors combine to create an unsafe
medication environment in acute care settings.
Research Evidence
Medication reconciliation studies have focused on the accuracy of the medication history
during various transitions: ambulatory to acute care inpatient setting, skilled nursing facility to
acute care inpatient setting, inpatient acute care setting to skilled nursing facility, inpatient acute
care setting to discharge, inpatient floor to the intensive care unit (ICU), and ICU to discharge.
Little research has focused on outcomes related to the prevalence of errors resulting from a lack
of or an incomplete patient medication list.
Vira and colleagues13 found a 38 percent discrepancy rate in their study of newly hospitalized
patients. Gleason and colleagues4 found more than half of the patients they studied had
discrepancies in medication histories or admission medication orders.
Among the most common medication discrepancies between what is in the patients history
and what is ordered upon admission to the hospital was omission of a medication that patients
reported taking prior to admission.13 These discrepancies result from incomplete documentation
of the patients medication history and a lack of time to search for the information. Nursing staff
have been noted spending in excess of an hour per patient admission or transfer trying to
accurately identify medications a patient has been receiving,3 including getting a list of
preadmission medications from the patient and filling in gaps through the pharmacy and primary
care physician.
Chevalier and colleagues14 examined nurses perceptions of medication reconciliation
practices. More than 60 percent of nurses reported that determining the medications a patient was
taking at home, clarifying medication orders at transfer, and ensuring accurate discharge
medication orders was a time-consuming process. Time requirements and staffing resources were
identified as a barrier to completing the process. Although implementing a medication
reconciliation process will likely consume more health care provider time initially, the process
may become more efficient once in place. A standardized reconciliation process has been
reported to reduce work and the rework associated with the management of medication orders.
Rozich and colleagues15 reported that implementing a systematic approach to reconciling
medications was found to decrease nursing time at transfer from the coronary care unit by 20
minutes per patient, and pharmacy time at hospital discharge by more than 40 minutes. Stover
and Somers16 reported that case managers performing the reconciliation process spent 5 to 10
minutes per day completing the process with new admissions, and each case manager typically
reviewed eight new admissions each day.
One challenge to having an accurate patient medication history is the lack of a standardized
location in the patient chart where the information may be found. A nurse may need to check the
nursing admission database, the medication administration record, the physician patient history
and progress notes, and the pharmacy database. Rozich and Resar15 found that prior to initiation
of a reconciliation process, details of the current medications in the inpatient chart were
nonexistent or incorrect 85 percent of the time. Similar findings were found in family practice.17
Nickerson and colleagues18 found that of the medication history discrepancies they identified, 83
percent had the potential for harm. Others reported that when a medication reconciliation process
was instituted, it reduced discrepancies from 70 percent to 15 percent.3, 19 Vira and colleagues13
reported that a medication reconciliation process prevented the potential for harm in 75 percent
of cases.
Transfers From Inpatient Floor to ICU and Discharge From the ICU
Two studies by Pronovost and colleagues20, 21 examined medication reconciliation in the
ICU. Examining discrepancies between medications a patient was receiving in the ICU and the
discharge orders from the surgical ICU resulted in 94 percent of discharge orders needing to be
changed. Following implementation of a paper-based medication tracking system, the error rate
of discharge medication orders was reduced to zero.20 Following implementation of a
reconciliation process using an electronic form at discharge from a surgical ICU, only 21 percent
of orders required changing.
2-462
Medication Reconciliation
Inpatient to Discharge
Four studies looked at the process of discharge from the hospital to home. Bayley and
colleagues,7 in a qualitative study including nurse, physician, and pharmacist informants,
reported that reconciliation failures at discharge stemmed from not resuming medications held
during the hospital stay, and insufficient patient education at discharge. These failures resulted
from incomplete gathering of the home medication regimen at admission and rushed discharges.
Moore and colleagues23 found that 42 percent of the patients they studied had one or more
errors in the discharge medication orders. Most often medications that should have been restarted
were not. The medications commonly involved were cardiovascular (36.4 percent),
gastrointestinal (27.3 percent), and pulmonary (13.6 percent). Sullivan and colleagues24 found
that 59 percent of discrepancies not corrected at discharge could have resulted in patient harm.
The use of a multipart paper prescription form for discharge medications was found to
improve accuracy. The form integrates admission medications, in-hospital changes, and
discharge medications. One part of the form is used as the prescription, the second is placed in
the chart, the third is given to the patient with instructions for home management, and the fourth
is sent to the primary care physician. Accuracy of medication prescriptions with the use of a
multipart form was 82 percent, as compared to 40 percent without the use of an integrated
process.25
2-463
Use of a computer order entry system can reduce errors at the time of discharge by
generating a list of medications used before and during the hospital admission. The medication
list with instructions can be printed and used for education and review with the patient.7 The
utility of such a system depends upon the prior implementation of an admission medication
reconciliation system. Some electronic discharge medication ordering systems allow for direct
transfer of the orders to the community pharmacy and to the primary care physician, as well as
keeping a permanent record on the electronic health record.
Clearly there is a need for patients, families, health care providers, and pharmacies to have a
single electronic medication record with everyone working from the same record and all
medications being reconciled against this record. Electronic systems make it easier to access
medication histories, but they need to be kept up to date, and information must be correlated with
patients actual medication use.
Electronic prescribing network systems are being developed that can instantaneously provide
a patients medication history to pharmacists, consumers, and health care providers, while
protecting patient privacy. Additionally, electronic prescribing allows for key fields such as drug
name, dose, route, and frequency. Electronic prescribing also allows for decision support such as
checking for allergies, double prescribing, and counteracting medications.
2-464
Medication Reconciliation
Challenges
There are many challenges associated with implementation of effective medication
reconciliation programs across the continuum of care. First, developing and implementing
effective programs is very complex considering the various sites of care, the need for
standardization in the process, and the importance of including the patient in the process.
2-465
Garnering executive leadership and support, obtaining physician and nurse understanding of the
need for medication reconciliation, and actively participating in the design and implementation
of programs may be difficult in many organizations where providers already feel burdened.
There is a time commitment in both obtaining the medication history and completing the
reconciliation process.
Research Implications
Research is needed on all aspects of the medication reconciliation process to provide an
evidence base for impacting the prevention of adverse drug events. The Institute of Medicine
report Preventing Medication Errors1 found that currently most of the studies reported in the
literature have small sample sizes and are single-site quality improvement projects. Multisite
studies across the continuum of care are needed to assess the scope of the problem. Intervention
studies using a variety of approaches, both paper based and electronic, are needed to determine
the accuracy, feasibility, and simplicity of maintaining accurate lists of a patients medication
history.
The medication reconciliation process takes time, initially an additional 30 to 60 minutes per
admission.15 If an inpatient unit has multiple discharges and admissions, this can translate to the
need for additional full-time staff. If nurses are responsible for the process, nursing hours per
patient day may need to increase. Study of how medication reconciliation processes change the
workflow and time associated with it are needed.
Busy clinicians are resistant to changing their workflow. Designing and testing streamlined
processes that will work across the continuum of care, from the ambulatory to the inpatient
setting, and having all stakeholders involved in the design will facilitate the process.
Studies of the sustainability of medication reconciliation processes need to be carried out.
What does it look like at 6, 12, and 24 months? Are improvements being maintained?
Patients need to be full partners and self-advocates in the medication reconciliation process.
Studies on systematic, multifaceted education programs regarding how to best maintain a current
and complete listing of all medications need to be undertaken, as recommended in Preventing
Medication Errors.1 Studies should also address what techniques (e.g., the use of a medication
card) work best to maintain an accurate list of medications.
Conclusion
There is some evidence to demonstrate how a medication reconciliation process is effective
at preventing adverse drug events. Few studies have been published demonstrating how to do the
process effectively or outlining the costs associated with design and implementation of
programs. Nonetheless, an effective medication reconciliation process across care settings
where medications a patient is taking are compared to what is being orderedis believed to
reduce errors. Comparing what is being taken in one setting with what is being prescribed in
another will avoid errors of omission, drug-drug interactions, drug-disease interactions, and other
discrepancies. Medication reconciliation is a major component of safe patient care in any
environment.
2-466
Medication Reconciliation
Search Strategy
Searches were carried out using the terms medication reconciliation, medication
verification, medication safety medication systems, and medication errors. OVID
databases for CINAHL, MEDLINE, and Google databases were searched. English-language
health care literature from 1965 through March 2007 was reviewed. Additional searches were
carried out on numerous patient safety Web sites, such as the Institute for Safe Medication
Practices, the National Patient Safety Foundation, the Joint Commission, and the Institute for
Healthcare Improvement. Reference lists from articles on medication reconciliation were also
used to identify additional publications.
Articles that describe various components of the reconciliation process were found. Studies
tended to be about one of the steps in the handoff process, such as admission from home to an
acute care facility. No studies were identified that described the reconciliation process along the
entire continuum of care from admission to an acute care facility, transfer from one level of care
to another (such as critical care to general care), and discharge back to the community to the
primary care practitioner or skilled care facility. The majority of articles were descriptive, and
published studies were primarily quality improvement projects with small sample sizes limited to
single clinical sites.
Author Affiliation
Jane H. Barnsteiner, Ph.D., R.N., F.A.A.N., professor of pediatric nursing, University of
Pennsylvania School of Nursing, and director of nursing translational research, Hospital of the
University of Pennsylvania. E-mail: barnstnr@nursing.upenn.edu.
References
1.
2.
6.
7.
3.
4.
8.
5.
9.
2-467
18. Nickerson A, MacKinnon NJ, Roberts N, et al. Drugtherapy problems, inconsistencies and omissions
identified during a medication reconciliation and
seamless care service. Healthc Q 2005;8:65-72.
2-468
Aim
Site
11 medical and
surgical units in 2
tertiary care
hospitals
Bayley 20057
Enhance understanding of
how patient handoffs are
related to risk of adverse
medical events before and
after implementation of an
information technology
solution
Examine frequency of
discrepancy between
medications prescribed and
those taken and associated
causal factors. Compare
medication containers and
reported use of medication
with medical records
Informant interviews
Bedell 200011
2-469
Boockvar 200422
Descriptive design
312 medical records in
ambulatory setting
4 nursing homes
Medication Reconciliation
Bates 199934
Outcome
Chevalier 200614
DeCarolis 200527
Aim
Measure nurses perceptions
of patient safety, medication
safety and current
medication reconciliation
practice at transition points in
a patients hospital stay
Compare usual process of
obtaining medication history
to systematic reconciliation
process
Assess accuracy of data in
the EMR and document
frequency and types of
discrepancies that occurred.
Gleason 20044
2-470
Ernst 20019
Kramer 200728
Site
Outcome
Three general
medicine units
Comparison of pharmacist
obtained medication history to
inpatient medical record and
computerized outpatient medical
profile.
Compared prescription renewal
requests with electronic medical
record data. 950 prescriptionrenewal requests for 134
medications over 3 month
period.
1 VA medical
center
283 patients on
general medicine
unit, 147 in
preimplementation
phase and 136 in
postimplementation
phase.
Family Medicine
Outpatient Clinic
Study
Study
Aim
Lau 20008
General medical
units of 2 acute
care hospitals
Manley 200312
Outpatient
hemodialysis
center
Ambulatory family
practice
Miller 199210
2-471
Determine prevalence of
medical errors from inpatient
to outpatient setting
Nickerson 200518
Paquette-Lamontagne
200225
Pronovost 200320
Pronovost 200421
Outcome
61% of patients had discrepancy from
community pharmacy records to inpatient
medication history. 26% of prescription
medications in use prior to admission
were not listed in hospital medical
records.
60% of patients had drug record
discrepancies.
Baseline: 51 patients (76%) had
prescribed medications with 87% of
charts with incomplete or no
documentation
1 week: 83% of charts had complete
prescription medication documentation
40 Months: 82% of charts had complete
prescription medication documentation
42% of patients had at least 1 medication
continuity error
Medical units in 3
teaching hospitals
Surgical ICU
1,455 patients in
surgical ICU over 1
year period
Medication Reconciliation
Moore 200323
Descriptive study of
implementation of duplicate
prescription forms
Baseline chart review 67
charts
Duplicate prescription form: 1
week = 50 charts; 40 months =
60 charts
Descriptive study of 86 patients
inpatient and ambulatory
medical records
Site
Rozich 200115
Rozich 20043
Vira 200613
Aim
Reduce medication
discrepancies at health care
transition points through the
implementation of a
medication reconciliation
process on admission, during
transfer and at discharge
from the hospital
Describe potential impact of
medication reconciliation
process to identify and rectify
errors at time of hospital
admission and discharge
Assess correspondence
between medications the
patient taking and
documentation in EMR
Whittington 200430
Reduce percentage of
admission ADEs caused by
errors in reconciliation
through use of admission
reconciliation form as
hospital medication record
and discharge prescription
form
Evaluate medication safety
infrastructure of criticalaccess hospitals in Florida
2-472
Wagner 199626
Winterstein 200635
Site
Outcome
Descriptive study of
implementation of medication
reconciliation process
Acute care
inpatient units
Baseline 20 charts
per week for 6
weeks the ongoing
chart review
Inpatient
community hospital
Outpatient geriatric
center
Descriptive study of
implementation of medication
reconciliation process Number
of patients enrolled not reported
4 hospitals
7 critical access
hospitals in Florida
Study