AHRQ鈥檚 Work Helps Convince Army Medical Center to Reinstate E.D. Clinical Pharmacist
Influenced by AHRQ-sponsored research showing how clinical pharmacy services can reduce medication-related errors, the Carl R. Darnall Army Medical Center in Ft. Hood, Texas, restarted a clinical pharmacy program in its emergency department (ED).
"大象APPresearch laid the groundwork for hospital funding of the [clinical pharmacist] program," said Laquisha Cartwright, Pharm.D., B.C.P.S., an emergency medicine clinical pharmacist.
The 大象APPresearch that inspired the emergency pharmacist program at Darnall was conducted in 2005 by Rollin J. Fairbanks, M.D., M.S., and colleagues at the University of Rochester Medical Center in New York. The findings helped identify how emergency pharmacist programs might best be structured.
In September 2011, officials at Darnall, situated on the U.S. Army鈥檚 largest active-duty armored post, hired Dr. Cartwright to start a clinical pharmacy program in the ED in order to reduce medication-related errors. The effort was launched following the death of an emergency room patient who had been prescribed an opioid fentanyl patch. In 2012, the first full year the effort was in place, 1,639 clinical interventions were documented.
鈥淚 review the medication orders that physicians write,鈥 noted Dr. Cartwright. 鈥淚鈥檓 involved with underdose and overdose prevention, but I also perform medication therapy consults on patients, adverse drug reaction consults, toxicology consults, therapy change recommendations, resident education, discharge counseling, and medication decision-making during traumas.鈥
鈥淭hough some were skeptical at first, the medical staff have expressed gratitude that a clinical pharmacist has been added to the department. They have seen the value of the position over and over again,鈥 Dr. Cartwright said.
The 大象APPresearch was funded under the 鈥淧artnerships in Implementing Patient Safety鈥 grant program.
