New grant will transform medication safety in aged care

New grant will transform medication safety in aged care

IT innovation will support residents and staff

With medication safety an ongoing concern for the aged care sector, a new project led by Macquarie University will demonstrate how sophisticated and user-friendly IT systems can improve the management of medication and support staff and residents.

Professor Johanna Westbrook, Director of the Centre for Health Systems and Safety Research at the Australian Institute of Health Innovation, has been awarded $992,386 from the National Health and Medical Research Council Medical Research Future Fund to lead this project.

Poor medication management is a critical problem in aged care, and one that has proven difficult to solve.

Research presented to the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety, has previously shown for instance that 65% of residents on antipsychotics used them for longer than guideline recommendations, Professor Westbrook said.

This is a two-year project to demonstrate how IT systems with sophisticated data processing can improve medication management by:

  • supporting the monitoring of medication and guiding decision-making,
  • reducing the workload of aged care staff, and
  • providing real-time information to residents and their families.

The large-scale data generated will also produce new evidence of variation in medication indicators across the country and a national atlas of medication use in residential aged care.

The project will work in close partnership with BESTMED’s existing medication management system used across Australia in more than 500 residential aged care facilities and by pharmacists and general practitioners caring for over 58,000 patients.

“We are pleased to be partnering with BESTMED as crucially, this project recognises the need to reduce the workload burden on the aged care workforce through solutions that are practical and scalable and will work in the real world,” Professor Westbrook said.

“We will design and test an intervention to provide residents and their families with dependable and timely information about changes to medication to keep them better informed and increase opportunities for engagement in decision-making.”

The chief investigator team from Macquarie University, Deakin University, University of Sydney, University of Western Australia, Bond University and Monash University will undertake research in partnership with BESTMED, the Aged Care Industry IT Council, Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission, Consumers Health Forum of Australia, Western Sydney Local Health District, Melbourne Health, Southern Cross Care and Bupa Aged Care.

Professor Westbrook is available for interview, please contact chrissy.clay@mq.edu.au

CENTRES RELATED TO THIS NEWS

Centre for Health Systems and Safety Research

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT

Chrissy Clay, Media and Research Outreach Coordinator

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