HPE 91 – March 2019 | Page 21

include high risk medicines, pharmaceutical complexity, referrals from other health professionals and patients’ individual clinical factors were the most important factors that were considered. Electronic resources such as dashboards and electronic prescribing systems were shown to not have as much influence when prioritising workload for medicines reconciliation. Workload pressures were also shown to have less influence on how activities were prioritised. Similar results were seen when it came to pharmacy staff prioritising clinical activities (see Table 3 for responses on factors that influence pharmacy staff prioritising). Response about discharge priority however did show that pharmacy teams were influenced by non-clinical factors such as pressure to discharge patients quickly and maintain flow of patients through the hospital. This was in addition to the factors around the patient’s clinical condition and complexity. The most common barrier to effective clinical prioritisation was a lack of time and information. Pharmacy staff felt that due to a lack of readily available information effective prioritisation was a time consuming process. Communication was highlighted as a key facilitator to enable effective prioritisation practice. It was felt that pharmacy staff needed to work flexibly to prioritise patients dependent upon the individual patient factors and overall workload. Common ideas that were highlighted to improve clinical pharmacy prioritisation included developing an evidence-based prioritisation tool that would consistently flag up high-risk patients. To support this, pharmacy staff felt that effective IT solutions would help, as well as a robust definition to define a clinical pharmacy priority. Other improvements included better training for pharmacy and non-pharmacy staff about clinical pharmacy priorities and standardised methods of prioritisation. In particular respondents felt the need to empower junior staff to feel confident to make decisions. There were 80 (39%) of respondents who felt that they were happy with how they prioritise. Common themes identified through thematic analysis were that prioritisation was an essential skill that all pharmacy professionals required. It is described as a ‘skill that needs to be learnt’ and that ‘professional judgement needs to be applied’. Respondents views were prioritisation changes dependent upon the context of the patient, ward environment and pharmacy team circumstances. Prioritisation is a skill that is viewed as ‘continually developing’ throughout an individual’s career. The process of prioritisation ‘involves the analysis and interpretation of situations’. Individuals described ‘using multiple methods to prioritise’ and changing their prioritisation practice dependent upon workload or complexity of patients. One respondent stated that ‘insulin is a highrisk medicine but the risk associated depends upon the context. A patient prescribed insulin on a diabetes ward is likely to have a different level of risk profile than if they were prescribed insulin on a ward without speciality diabetes input’. Individuals described needing to understand the context of the clinical service they were working within. Key competencies that were described were communication with the wider healthcare team and confidence to make decisions. Training was a main theme that was identified by respondents. They described ‘junior staff members being taught prioritisation skills’ involving understanding and interpreting the complexity of patients’ pharmaceutical care. FIGURE 1 Principles and relationships of prioritisation Experience and knowledge • Appropriate knowledge and skills • Ability to clinically overview • Appropriate use of resources Empowerment/confidence • Clinical ability • Know when to refer • Decision making ability Communication • Systems to allow efficient handover • Concise transfer of information Discussion Prioritisation is a developing part of clinical pharmacy practice in secondary care. It can be thought of as complex multifactoral process that requires interpretation and understanding of the system. The core act of prioritisation for pharmacy staff is to perform a risk assessment considering the importance and urgency of a patients’ clinical condition. The risk level will be determined by the clinical situation and the individual patients’ circumstances. To undertake this risk assessment, information is key and pharmacy staff use a wide range of resources to prioritise. They need to communicate with other healthcare professionals as well as gather information about a patient’s specific circumstances. Prioritisation needs to be a rapid process that assimilates and analyses the pertinent patient specific issues to assign a degree of pharmaceutical risk to a patient. Electronic prioritisation tools have been developed to aid pharmacy staff to collate the complex information involved with prioritising a patient. The experience, knowledge and skill of pharmacy staff is however essential to be able to put context into the situation when prioritising. Pharmacy staff need to use their experience and knowledge to interpret the risk and complexity of the individual and consider this within the wider context of the current clinical picture. Patients’ pharmaceutical risks and clinical needs evolve as they journey through hospital. Systems need to enable pharmacy staff to focus on activities when a patient is most at risk or has greatest pharmaceutical need. It is important to highlight that pharmacy staff appear to place Context of current services • Effective targeting of resources • Adaptability of services to meet demands • Decision making ability Risk assessment • Assess urgency • Differentiate urgent vs important • Assessment made based on clinical situation Complexity • Assess all medicines prescribed in the clinical context • Presenting condition and past medical history • Patient centred focus hospitalpharmacyeurope.com | 2019 | Issue 91 | 21