Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Human Factors
Date Submitted: Mar 3, 2021
Date Accepted: Jul 23, 2021
Date Submitted to PubMed: Aug 3, 2021
Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.
Robotic Pharmacy Implementation and Outcomes in Saudi Arabia. A Twenty-One Month Review.
ABSTRACT
Background:
We describe the introduction, use and evaluation of an automation and integration pharmacy development program in a private facility in Saudi Arabia. The project was undertaken to meet specific challenges of increasing throughput, reducing medication dispensing error, increasing patient satisfaction, and freeing up pharmacists’ time for increased face-to-face consultations with patients.
Objective:
To reduce outpatient waiting times for dispensing of medications, to help to free up time to meet patient expectations for pharmacy services including medication education, to reduce the volume of non-value-added pharmacist tasks, to reduce dispensing error rates, and to aid with the rapid development of a reputation in the served community for patient-centred care for a new facility.
Methods:
Pre-implementation data for patient wait-time for dispensing of prescribed medications as one measure of patient satisfaction, pharmacist activity and productivity in terms of patient interaction time were gathered. Reported and discovered dispensing errors per 1,000 prescriptions were also aggregated. All pre-implementation data was gathered over an eleven- month period. Initial project goals were set as a 50% reduction in the average patient wait-time, a 15% increase in patient satisfaction regarding pharmacy waiting time and pharmacy services, a 25% increase in pharmacist productivity and zero dispensing errors. This was expected to be achieved within ten months of go-live.
Results:
From go-live, data was gathered on the above metrics in one-month increments. At the 10-month point there had been a 53% reduction in the average waiting time, a 20% increase in patient satisfaction regarding pharmacy waiting time, with a 22% increase in overall patient satisfaction regarding pharmacy services, and a 33% increase in pharmacist productivity. There was a zero-rate dispensing error reported.
Conclusions:
The robotic pharmacy solution studied was highly effective, but upstream supply chain is vital to throughput maintenance, particularly when automated filling is planned. The automation solution must also be seamlessly and completely integrated into the facility’s software systems for appointments, medication records and prescription in order to garner its full benefits. Patient overall satisfaction with pharmacy services is strongly influenced by waiting time and follow up studies ae required to identify how to use this positive effect and how to optimally use ‘freed-up’ pharmacist time. The extra time spent with patients by pharmacists, and the complete overview of the patient’s medication history, that full integration gives, creates opportunities for tackling challenging issues such as medication nonadherence. Reduced waiting times may also allow for smaller prescription fill volumes, and more frequent outpatient department visits, allowing increased contact time with pharmacists.
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