TY - JOUR T1 - Improving feedback on junior doctors’ prescribing errors: mixed-methods evaluation of a quality improvement project JF - BMJ Quality & Safety JO - BMJ Qual Saf SP - 240 LP - 247 DO - 10.1136/bmjqs-2015-004717 VL - 26 IS - 3 AU - Matthew Reynolds AU - Seetal Jheeta AU - Jonathan Benn AU - Inderjit Sanghera AU - Ann Jacklin AU - Digby Ingle AU - Bryony Dean Franklin Y1 - 2017/03/01 UR - http://qualitysafety.bmj.com/content/26/3/240.abstract N2 - Background Prescribing errors occur in up to 15% of UK inpatient medication orders. However, junior doctors report insufficient feedback on errors. A barrier preventing feedback is that individual prescribers often cannot be clearly identified on prescribing documentation.Aim To reduce prescribing errors in a UK hospital by improving feedback on prescribing errors.Interventions We developed three linked interventions using plan–do–study–act cycles: (1) name stamps for junior doctors who were encouraged to stamp or write their name clearly when prescribing; (2) principles of effective feedback to support pharmacists to provide feedback to doctors on individual prescribing errors and (3) fortnightly prescribing advice emails that addressed a common and/or serious error.Implementation and evaluation Interventions were introduced at one hospital site in August 2013 with a second acting as control. Process measures included the percentage of inpatient medication orders for which junior doctors stated their name. Outcome measures were junior doctors' and pharmacists' perceptions of current feedback provision (evaluated using quantitative pre-questionnaires and post-questionnaires and qualitative focus groups) and the prevalence of erroneous medication orders written by junior doctors between August and December 2013.Results The percentage of medication orders for which junior doctors stated their name increased from about 10% to 50%. Questionnaire responses revealed a significant improvement in pharmacists' perceptions but no significant change for doctors. Focus group findings suggested increased doctor engagement with safe prescribing. Interrupted time series analysis showed no difference in weekly prescribing error rates between baseline and intervention periods, compared with the control site.Conclusion Findings suggest improved experiences around feedback. However, attempts to produce a measurable reduction in prescribing errors are likely to need a multifaceted approach of which feedback should form part. ER -