Background The Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) is a well-known non-profit organization dedicated to preventing medication errors. Every two years they publish best practices that can reduce the occurrence of medication errors. This study aims to evaluate the implementation status of these best practices and to understand barriers associated with non-implementation at a tertiary hospital in Saudi Arabia. Methodology This was a two-phase qualitative study. First, a survey consisting of the ISMP best practices was sent to employees (mainly heads of departments) to fill out the implementation rate for each best practice. Then an interview or a focus group was conducted to further validate their answers and understand why some best practices were not implemented. Results Our study found that the highest implemented best practices were having strategies to improve safety with high-alert medications (best practice #19, 85.7%), having antidotes and reversal agents readily available (best practice #9, 75%), independent verification of sterile preparation (best practice #11, 75%), and limiting the number of removable medications from the automated dispensing unit by override (best practice #16, 75%). The least implemented best practices were ensuring that oral liquid medications are dispensed in a syringe (best practice #4, 12.5%), maximizing use of barcode verification (best practice #18, 12.5%), purchasing oral liquid dosing devices that display metric scale (best practice #5, 25%), eliminating glacial acetic acid from all areas of the hospital (best practice #6, 28.6%), and eliminating all 1,000 mL of sterile water from all areas outside of the pharmacy (best practice #10, 28.6%). Challenges associated with implementation were related to knowledge, motivation, and opportunity in the environment, with the latter being the highest barrier associated with non-implementation. Conclusions Healthcare providers need to have knowledge about the best practices and the rationale behind them, the motivation to perform them, and the necessary resources to implement the best practices in their hospital.
Keywords: best practices; challenges; hospitals; implementation rate; medication error; medication safety.
Copyright © 2023, Alothmany et al.