How Do Pharmacists Distribute Their Work Time during a Clinical Intervention Trial?—A Time and Motion Study
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35732Date
2024-07-09Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Holis, Renata Vesela; Elenjord, Renate; Lehnbom, Elin Christina; Andersen, Sigrid; Fagerli, Marie; Johnsgård, Tine; Zahl-Holmstad, Birgitte; Svendsen, Kristian; Waaseth, Marit; Skjold, frode; Garcia, Beate HennieAbstract
Emergency departments (EDs) handle urgent medical needs for a diverse population.
Medication errors and adverse drug events pose safety risks in the ED. Clinical pharmacists, experts
in medication use, play a crucial role in identifying and optimizing medication therapy. The aim of
this study was to investigate how clinical pharmacists introduced into the ED interdisciplinary teams
distribute their work time. In a time and motion study, we used the Work Observation Method By
Activity Timing (WOMBAT) to observe pharmacists in two Norwegian EDs. The pragmatic approach
allowed pharmacists to adapt to ED personnel and patient needs. The pharmacists spent 41.8% of
their work time on medication-related tasks, especially those linked to medication reconciliation,
including documenting medication-related issues (16.2%), reading and retrieving written information
(9.6%), and obtaining oral information about medication use from patients (9.5%). The remaining
time was spent on non-medication-related tasks (41.8%), and on standby and movement (17.4%). In
conclusion, ED pharmacists spent 42% of their work time on medication-related tasks, predominantly
medication reconciliation. Their relatively new role in the interdisciplinary team may have limited
their broader clinical impact. Relative to other ED healthcare professionals, ED pharmacists’ goal
remains to ensure accurate patient medication lists and appropriate medication use.
Publisher
MDPICitation
Holis RV, Elenjord RE, Lehnbom EC, Andersen S, Fagerli M, Johnsgård T, Zahl-Holmstad B, Svendsen K, Waaseth M, Skjold f, Garcia BH. How Do Pharmacists Distribute Their Work Time during a Clinical Intervention Trial?—A Time and Motion Study. Pharmacy. 2024;12(4)Metadata
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