Look-Alike, Sound-Alike Medication Perioperative Incidents in a Regional Australian Hospital: Assessment using a Novel Medication Safety Culture Assessment Tool.
Background: Medication safety remains a global concern, with governments and organisations striving to mitigate preventable patient harm across healthcare systems. Look-alike, Sound -alike medications incidents and the safety culture are widely acknowledged as a contributor to medication errors, particularly within the high-risk perioperative environment. The Medication Safety Culture Indicator Matrix is a novel tool developed by the Canadian Institute for Safe Medication Practices to assess the maturity of the medication safety culture. This study aims to delineate Look-Alike Sound-Alike (LASA) medication incidents reported in the pharmacy and perioperative settings of an Australian hospital and assess the maturity of the medication safety culture.
Methods: The study setting is within a large regional hospital in Australia, servicing both adult and paediatric populations. Medication incidents from 1st April 2018 to 1st April 2023 were retrospectively gathered from the Clinical Incident Management System, Riskman®. Data and statistical analyses were carried out using Microsoft Excel®. The necessary approvals were secured from the Heath Service Human Research and Ethics Committee.
Results: During the five-year period, a total of 246 (4.1%) of the 6,002 medication incidents within the health service were identified as meeting the inclusion criteria. Of the 246 medication incidents, 63.0% were identified from the Pharmacy Department, while 22.0% and 15.0% were from the Post Anaesthetic Care Unit and Anaesthetics Department respectively. The most frequently reported incident classification in both the Anaesthetics Department and Post Anaesthetic Care Unit was 'incorrect dose', followed by 'incorrect medication'. Throughout the five-year period, 46 (18.7%) of the 246 medication incidents were attributed to Look-Alike, Sound -Alike sources of error, predominantly identified in the Pharmacy Department (73.9%), followed by the Anaesthetics Department (17.4%) and the Post Anaesthetic Care Unit (8.7%). High-risk medications were most frequently reported to the Anaesthetics Department. Packaging (packaging alone, naming and packaging and syringe swaps) was determined to be a contributing factor in 30 (65.2%) of the 46 LASA medication incidents. Medication Safety Culture Indicator Matrix assessment revealed a reactive medication safety culture. Additionally, the medication incident report documentation was found to be mostly complete or semi-complete.
Conclusions: Our analysis delineated medication incidents occurring across the entire medication management cycle and identified incidents related to LASA medications as a contributor to medication incidents across these clinical settings. This novel medication safety culture tool assessment highlighted opportunities for improvement with clinical incident documentation.