Top Organizations Urge a Concerted Effort To Improve Safety in Hospital Compounding

WASHINGTON, Jan. 22, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Five years after the New England Compounding Center (NECC) tragedy that brought to light safety problems stemming from the compounding of pharmaceuticals and other therapies, a white paper was released today reflecting the recommendations of major stakeholders for additional steps needed to improve patient safety relative to compounded medicines. The paper was the outcropping of a milestone dialogue where top pharmacy, healthcare provider, hospital and patient organizations assessed progress made since the 2012 NECC tragedy and the subsequent enactment of the Drug Quality and Security Act by Congress.

In spite of congressional action, heightened regulatory efforts - including recent guidance from the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on compounding pharmacies - and industry self-policing since the NECC tragedy, the paper highlights that compounding errors continue to take place too frequently due to gaps in training, hospital resource limitations, and a lack of uniformly accepted and implemented best practices. A 2016 State of Pharmacy survey showed that more than one-third of hospitals have experienced a patient health event stemming from a compounding error since 2012.

Stakeholders from multiple disciplines sought to address these gaps at the Roundtable on Patient Safety and Hospital Compounding, and issued the white paper today to provide more direction to policymakers and others about what more can be done to boost hospital patient safety. Participants cited the need for a deliberate, concerted effort to address patient safety of these medicines. Among the top recommendations were:

    --  Increased adoption of technologies in hospitals to prevent human errors.
        Recent technological advances have the potential to minimize human
        error.  Despite these advances, these technologies are employed in only
        2 out of every 10 U.S. hospitals.
    --  Increased training and support for a uniform curriculum for sterile
        compounding practices.  Many schools of pharmacy do not include sterile
        compounding as part of their core curriculum.  Pharmacist technician
        errors can be reduced with a standard, accessible pharmacy technician
        curriculum that should be developed.
    --  Use of commercially manufactured products and medicines, wherever
        available and appropriate.  Some compounding occurs even though certain
        therapies can be purchased from commercial manufacturing facilities that
        are supervised by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).  Using
        commercially manufactured medications would reduce the incidence of
        hospital medication errors and increase capacity in hospital pharmacies.

Christopher Jerry, the father of a young girl who died from a hospital medication accident, urged policymakers and practitioners to work together to advance these and other leading practices. He noted, "Even one preventable death due to hospital medication errors is unacceptable. As a community, we must band together and take these and other simple steps to prevent these tragedies."

"This white paper reinforces our understanding of what is needed to help ensure accuracy and safety of medications before they are delivered to patients," noted Jeannell Mansur from Joint Commission Resources who participated in the event. "The best way we can prevent future tragedies is to learn from the past, identify shared leading practices, and put them to work together across all relevant fields of expertise."

Another outcome of the meeting is the development of a checklist of recommended best practices for hospital compounding, which will be issued in the coming weeks.

For more information on the Roundtable on Patient Safety and Hospital Compounding, please visit www.patientsafetyroundtable.org.

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SOURCE Roundtable on Patient Safety and Hospital Compounding