Reducing Infusion Wait Time: Redesigning Medication Order Verification Workflow At A Comprehensive Cancer Center.

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY(2018)

Cited 1|Views17
No score
Abstract
129Background: Many factors contribute to long wait times for cancer patients on the day of their infusion. At Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI), a contributing factor is patient flow between exam and infusion. Order verification affects patient flow and begins when the following two criteria are met: provider signed an order and the patient’s scheduled infusion appointment arrives. Patients often check-in to infusion before their scheduled infusion appointment. Order verification has three sequential steps: nurse verification, pharmacist 1 verify (V1), and pharmacist 2 verify (V2). Methods: A team of pharmacists, nurses, providers, and process improvement leads designed a pilot in which V1 moved before nurse verification, concurrent with patient check-in to infusion. Further, V1 began as soon as an order was signed; the pharmacist did not wait for a patient’s scheduled infusion appointment. Nurse verification and V2 occurred in sequence after V1. Timestamp data were extracted from Epic and analyzed via...
More
Translated text
Key words
medication order,infusion wait time,comprehensive cancer center,workflow
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined