Medication Management Strategies at Hospital Admission: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis

Title
Medication Management Strategies at Hospital Admission: A Systematic Review and Meta‐Analysis
Publication Date
2026-05
Author(s)
Emadi, Tara
Yiu, Chin Hang
Liu, Shania
Tang, Dihan
Yeung, Kingston
Baysari, Melissa
Budgeon, Charley
Carter, Stephen
Criddle, Deirdre
Fleming, Cristen
Francis, Martina
Grover, Charu
Hawthorne, Andrew
Hawthorne, Deborah
Khlentzos, Alexander
Khlentzos, Jillian
Krogh, Linda
McMillan, Faye
Moles, Rebekah
Nguyen, Kim
Oldfield, Lachlan
Packer, Anna
Penm, Michelle
Pham, Lily
Phillips, Katie
Poon, Simon
Ratnanayagam, Ganga
Rigby, Debbie
Sanfilippo, Frank
Shakib, Sepehr
Tan, Edwin
Van Dort, Bethany
Yates, Paul
Yik, Jerry
Angley, Manya
Elliott, Rohan A
Penm, Jonathan
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc
Place of publication
United States of America
DOI
10.1111/cts.70586
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/73820
Abstract

Hospital admission is high risk for medication harm due to transfer errors, delays, and charting mistakes. Up to 70% of admission medication lists contain errors, 59% potentially harmful, highlighting the need for safety strategies. The aim of the study is to systematically review the effectiveness of strategies for medication management at hospital admission. Following PRISMA guideline, three databases were searched for RCTs. Subgroup analyses assessed outcomes including mortality, readmissions/Emergency Department (ED) visits, length of stay (LOS), medication errors, and adverse drug events (ADEs), with meta-analysis where possible. Nineteen RCTs were included. The strategies were classified into five categories: medication reconciliation, supported medication review, collaborative model of medication review, Partnered Pharmacist Medication Charting (PPMC), and real-time health information exchange (HIE) tools. Medication reconciliation alone showed limited effectiveness in reducing medication errors and ADEs while combining with other strategies was more effective in minimizing ADEs. The meta-analysis showed that PPMC can be considered a potential strategy to reduce medication errors and ADEs. Outcomes such as readmission, ED visits, mortality, and LOS were reported as secondary outcomes, and the strategies showed no significant effect in improving them. Overall admission strategies can reduce medication-related outcomes such as medication errors and ADEs; however, stronger evidence is needed to confirm their impact on other outcomes. Future research should focus on integrating Clinical Decision Support (CDS) and stratification tools into electronic medical records to enhance the efficiency of these tools.

Link
Citation
Clinical and Translational Science, 19(5), p. 1-16
ISSN
1752-8062
1752-8054
Start page
1
End page
16
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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