AI Article Synopsis

  • Electronic prescribing systems can significantly improve medication safety and management in hospitals, yet realizing their full potential remains difficult despite investments in technology and training.
  • A review of policy and research literature across OECD countries revealed that very few have national strategies for optimizing ePrescribing, although some regions show advanced digital maturity.
  • The study emphasizes the need for coordinated strategies to overcome barriers and foster innovations like patient involvement in ePrescribing processes.

Article Abstract

Objective: Electronic prescribing systems offer considerable opportunities to enhance the safety, effectiveness and efficiency of prescribing and medicines management decisions but, despite considerable investments in health IT infrastructure and healthcare professional training, realising these benefits continues to prove challenging. How systems are customised and configured to achieve optimal functionality is an increasing focus for policymakers. We sought to develop an overview of the policy landscape currently supporting optimisation of hospital ePrescribing systems in economically developed countries with a view to deriving lessons for the United Kingdom (UK).

Methods: We conducted a review of research literature and policy documents pertaining to optimisation of ePrescribing within hospitals across Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries on Embase, Medline, National Institute for Health (NIH), Google Scholar databases from 2010 to 2020 and the websites of organisations with international and national health policy interests in digital health and ePrescribing. We designed a typology of policies targeting optimisation of ePrescribing systems that provides an overview of evidence relating to the level at which policy is set, the aims and the barriers encountered in enacting these policies.

Results: Our database searches retrieved 11 relevant articles and other web resources mainly from North America and Western Europe. We identified very few countries with a national level strategy for optimisation of ePrescribing in hospitals. There were hotspots of digital maturity in relation to ePrescribing at institutional, specialisation, regional and national levels in the US and Europe. We noted that such countries with digital maturity fostered innovations such as patient involvement.

Conclusions: We found that, whilst helpful to achieve certain aims, coordinated strategies within and across countries for optimisation of ePrescribing systems are rare, even in countries with well-established ePrescribing and digital health infrastructures. There is at present little policy focus on maximising the utility of ePrescribing systems.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8941697PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20552076221085074DOI Listing

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