Chapter 11. Automated Medication Dispensing Devices
Michael D. Murray, Pharm.D., M.P.H.
Purdue
University School of Pharmacy
Background
In the 1980s, automated dispensing devices appeared on the scene,
a generation after the advent of unit-dose dispensing (Chapter 11).
The invention and production of these devices brought hopes of
reduced rates of medication errors, increased efficiency for
pharmacy and nursing staff, ready availability of medications where
they are most often used (the nursing unit or inpatient ward), and
improved pharmacy inventory and billing functions.1-4
Although the capacity of such systems to contribute to patient
safety appears great, surprisingly few studies have evaluated the
clinical impact of these devices.
Practice Description
Automated dispensing systems are drug storage devices or cabinets
that electronically dispense medications in a controlled fashion and
track medication use. Their principal advantage lies in permitting
nurses to obtain medications for inpatients at the point of use.
Most systems require user identifiers and passwords, and internal
electronic devices track nurses accessing the system, track the
patients for whom medications are administered, and provide usage
data to the hospital's financial office for the patients' bills.
These automated dispensing systems can be stocked by centralized
or decentralized pharmacies. Centralized pharmacies prepare and
distribute medications from a central location within the hospital.
Decentralized pharmacies reside on nursing units or wards, with a
single decentralized pharmacy often serving several units or wards.
These decentralized pharmacies usually receive their medication
stock and supplies from the hospital's central pharmacy.
More advanced systems provide additional information support
aimed at enhancing patient safety through integration into other
external systems, databases, and the Internet. Some models use
machine-readable code for medication dispensing and administration.
Three types of automated dispensing devices were analyzed in the
studies reviewed here, the McLaughlin dispensing system, the Baxter
ATC-212 dispensing system, and the Pyxis Medstation Rx. Their
attributes are described below.
- The McLaughlin dispensing system5 includes a
bedside dispenser, a programmable magnetic card, and a pharmacy
computer. It is a locked system that is loaded with the
medications prescribed for a patient. At the appropriate dosing
time, the bedside dispenser drawer unlocks automatically to allow
a dose to be removed and administered. A light above the patient's
door illuminates at the appropriate dosing time. Only certain
medications fit in the compartmentalized cabinet (such as tablets,
capsules, small pre-filled syringes, and ophthalmic drops).
- The Baxter ATC-212 dispensing system6 uses a
microcomputer to pack unit-dose tablets and capsules for oral
administration. It is usually installed at the pharmacy.
Medications are stored in calibrated canisters that are designed
specifically for each medication. Canisters are assigned a
numbered location, which is thought to reduce mix-up errors upon
dispensing. When an order is sent to the microcomputer, a tablet
is dispensed from a particular canister. The drug is ejected into
a strip-packing device where it is labeled and hermetically
sealed.
- The Pyxis Medstation, Medstation Rx, and Medstation Rx 1000
are automated dispensing devices kept on the nursing
unit.7-9 These machines are often compared to automatic
teller machines (ATMs). The Medstation interfaces with the
pharmacy computer. Physicians' orders are entered into the
pharmacy computer and then transferred to the Medstation where
patient profiles are displayed to the nurse who accesses the
medications for verified orders. Each nurse is provided with a
password that must be used to access the Medstation. Pharmacists
or technicians keep these units loaded with medication. Charges
are made automatically for drugs dispensed by the unit. Earlier
models had sufficient memory to contain data for about one week,
and newer models can store data for longer periods.
Studies reviewed did not include the automated dispensing systems
manufactured by Omnicell, which produces point-of-use systems that
can be integrated into a hospital's information system.10
Omnicell systems are also capable of being integrated into external
support systems that support machine-readable code, drug information
services, and medication error reporting systems.
Prevalence and Severity of the Target Safety
Problem
Medication errors within hospitals occur with 2% to 17% of doses
ordered for inpatients.5,7,11-14 It has been suggested
that the rate of inpatient medication errors is one per patient per
inpatient day.15 The specific medication errors targeted
by automated dispensing systems are those related to drug dispensing
and administration. Even with the use of unit-doses (see Chapter 11)
errors still occur at the dispensing16 and administration
stages3,17 of the medication use process. For instance,
in one large study of 530 medical errors in 10,070 written orders
for drugs (5.3 errors/100 orders),18 pharmacy dispensing
accounted for 11% of errors and nursing administration
38%.3
Opportunities for Impact
Automated dispensing devices have become increasingly common
either to supplement or replace unit-dose distribution systems in an
attempt to improve medication availability, increase the efficiency
of drug dispensing and billing, and reduce errors. A 1999 national
survey of drug dispensing and administration practices indicated
that 38% of responding hospitals used automated medication
dispensing units and 8.2% used machine-readable coding with
dispensing.19 Three-fourths of respondents stated that
their pharmacy was centralized and of these centralized pharmacies,
77% were not automated. Hospitals with automated centralized
pharmacies reported that greater than 50% of their inpatient doses
were dispensed via centralized automated systems. Half of all
responding hospitals used a decentralized medication storage system.
One-third of hospitals with automated storage and dispensing systems
were linked to the pharmacy computer. Importantly, about half of the
surveyed hospitals reported drug distributions that bypassed the
pharmacy including floor stock, borrowing patients' medications, and
hidden drug supplies.
Study Designs
There were no true randomized trials. One crossover study of the
McLaughlin dispensing system randomized nurses to work with the
intervention medication system or the control system.5 We
classified this as a Level 2 study, since, from the patient
perspective, the design is that of a non-randomized trial. Other
studies included in this review consisted of retrospective
observational studies with before-after6-8 or
cross-sectional design11 (Level 3). The reviewed studies
described dispensing systems for orally administered medications,
and were published between 1984 and 1995 (see Table 12.1).
Study Outcomes
All studies measured rates of medication errors (Level 2
outcome). Four studies5,7,8,11 detected errors by direct
observation using a methodology that was first described by
Barker.5 Direct observation methods have been criticized
because of purported Hawthorne effect (bias involving changed
behavior resulting from measurements requiring direct observation of
study subjects). However, proponents of the method state that such
effects are short-lived, dissipating within hours of
observation.15 Dean and Barber have recently demonstrated
the validity and reliability of direct observational methods to
detect medication administration errors.20 Another study,
a Level 3 design, determined errors by inspecting dispensed
drugs.6
Evidence for Effectiveness of the Practice
The evidence provided by the limited number of available,
generally poor quality studies does not suggest that automated
dispensing devices reduce medication errors. There is also no
evidence to suggest that outcomes are improved with the use of these
devices. Most of the published studies comparing automated devices
with unit-dose dispensing systems report reductions in medication
errors of omission and scheduling errors with the
former.7,9 The studies suffer from multiple problems with
confounding, as they often compare hospitals or nursing care units
that may differ in important respects other than the medication
distribution system.
Potential for Harm
Human intervention may prevent these systems from functioning as
designed. Pharmacists and nurses can override some of the patient
safety features. When the turn around time for order entry into the
automated system is prolonged, nurses may override the system
thereby defeating its purpose. Furthermore, the automated dispensing
systems must be refilled intermittently to replenish exhausted
supplies. Errors can occur during the course of refilling these
units or medications may shift from one drawer or compartment to
another causing medication mix-ups. Either of these situations can
slip past the nurse at medication administration.
The results of the study of the McLaughlin dispensing system
indicated that though overall errors were reduced compared to
unit-dose (10.6% vs. 15.9%), errors decreased for 13 of 20 nurses
but increased for the other 7 nurses.5 In a study of
Medstation Rx vs. unit-dose,8 errors decreased in the
cardiovascular surgery unit, where errors were recorded by work
measurement observations. However, errors increased over 30% in 6 of
7 nurses after automated dispensing was installed in the
cardiovascular intensive care unit, where incident reports and
medication error reports were both used for ascertaining errors,
raising the question of measurement bias. Finally, in a study
primarily aimed at determining differences in errors for ward and
unit-dose dispensing systems,11 a greater error
prevalence was found for medications dispensed using Medstation Rx
compared with those dispensed using unit-dose or non-automated floor
stock (17.1% vs. 5.4%).
Costs and Implementation
The cost of automated dispensing mainly involves the capital
investment of renting or purchasing equipment for dispensing,
labeling, and tracking (which often is done by computer). A 1995
study revealed that the cost of Medstation Rx to cover 10 acute care
units (330 total beds) and 4 critical care units (48 total beds) in
a large referral hospital would be $1.28 million over 5 years.
Taking into account costs saved from reduced personnel and decreased
drug waste, the units had the potential to save $1 million over 5
years. Most studies that examine economic impact found a trade-off
between reductions in medication dispensing time for pharmacy and
medication administration time for nursing personnel. A common
complaint by nurses is long waiting lines at Pyxis Medstations if
there are not enough machines. Nurses must access these machines
using a nurse-specific password. This limited access to drugs on
nursing units decreases drug waste and pilferage.
Comment
Although the implementation of automated dispensing reduces
personnel time for medication administration and improves billing
efficiency, reduction in medication errors have not been uniformly
realized. Indeed, some studies suggest that errors may increase with
some forms of automation. The results of the study of the McLaughlin
Dispensing System by Barker et al5 showed considerable
nurse-to-nurse variability in the error rate between the automated
system and conventional unit dose. Qualitative data aimed at
determining the reason for this variability would be useful. The
study by Klein et al6 indicated little difference in the
accuracy of medication cart filling by the Baxter ATC-212 (0.65%)
versus filling by technicians (0.84%). Borel and Rascati found that
medication errors, largely those related to the time of
administration, were fewer after implementation of the Pyxis
Medstation Rx (10.4%) compared with the historical period
(16.9%).7 These results are consistent with a more recent
study by Shirley, that found a 31% increase in the on-time
administration of scheduled doses after installation of the
Medstation Rx 1000.9 In contrast, errors were greater
after Medstation Rx in the study by Schwarz and Brodowy,8
increasing on 6 of 7 nursing units by more than 30%. Finally, Dean
et al found half the errors in a ward-based system without
automation in the United Kingdom (3.0%, 95% CI: 2.4-3.7%) compared
with an automated unit-dose medication distribution system in the
United States (6.9%, 95% CI: 5.2-8.5%).11
The practical limitations of the systems were illustrated by a
variety of process deviations observed by Borel and
Rascati.7 These included nurses waiting at busy
administration times, removal of doses ahead of time to circumvent
waiting, and overriding the device when a dose was needed quickly.
These procedural failures emphasize an often-raised point with the
introduction of new technologies, namely that the latest innovations
are not a solution for inadequate or faulty processes or
procedures.2
Although automated dispensing systems are increasingly common, it
appears they may not be completely beneficial in their current form.
Further study is needed to demonstrate the effectiveness of newer
systems such as the Omnicell automated dispensing devices. If the
standard, namely unit-dose dispensing, is to be improved, such
improvements will likely derive from robotics and informatics. To
document impact of automated dispensing devices on patient safety,
studies are needed comparing unit-dose dispensing with automated
dispensing devices. Until the benefits of automated dispensing
devices become clearer, the opportunities for impact of these
devices is uncertain.
Table 11.1. Six studies reviewing automated drug
dispensing systems*
Study |
Study Design |
Study Outcomes |
N |
Results |
Barker, 19845 |
Prospective controlled clinical trial (Level
2) |
Errors of omission and commission among number
of ordered and unauthorized doses. (Level 2) |
1775 |
96 errors among 902 observations (10.6%) using
the McLaughlin dispensing system vs. 139 errors among 873
observations (15.9%) using unit-dose dispensing
(control) |
Klein, 19946 |
Prospective comparison of two cohorts (Level
2) |
Dispensing errors in unit-dose drawers to be
delivered to nursing units (Level 2) |
7842 |
34 errors found among 4029 doses (0.84%)
filled manually by technicians vs. 25 errors among 3813 doses
(0.66%) filled by automated dispensing device |
Borel, 19957 |
Prospective before-after study (Level 2) |
Errors observed during medication
administration in medications administered (Level 2) |
1802 |
148 errors among 873 observations (16.9%)
before vs. 97 errors among 929 observations (10.4%) after
Medstation Rx (p<0.001). Most errors were wrong time
errors. |
Schwarz, 19958 |
Prospective before-after study (Level 2) |
Errors in medications administered (Level
2) |
NAa |
Medication errors decreased after automated
dispensing on the cardiovascular surgery unit but increased on
the cardiovascular intensive care unit. |
Dean, 199511 |
Cross-sectional comparison (Level 3) of US and
UK hospitals with different pharmacy distribution systems |
Errors in medications administered (Level
2) |
3675 |
63 errors among 919 observations (6.9%, 95%
CI: 5.2-8.5%) in the US hospital using unit doses and
automated dispensing vs. 84 errors among 2756 observations
(3.0%; 95% CI, 2.4-3.7%) in the UK hospital using ward stock.
The absolute difference in error rates was 3.9% (95%CI:
2.1-5.7%). |
* CI indicates confidence interval.
a Study used various denominator data.
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