2006 Midyear Clinical Meeting
Click here to go to the previous page
Technology Interventions: A Critical Look at the Evidence
Track:
Sessions
Program Code: 231-L04
Date: Tuesday, December 5, 2006
Time: 8:00 AM to 11:00 AM
Location:
304A-B (CC)
MODERATOR:
Click the plus sign to see more detailed information about each speaker.
John Poikonen,
PharmD, Director, Outpatient Pharmacy Services,
Umass Memorial Medical Center
I currently report to the Chief Pharmacy Officer and the Chief Information Officer for a large academic medical center. We have worked out a reasonable and equitable working and reporting relationship
|
SPEAKER(S):
David W. Bates, M.D., M.S., Chief, Division of General Medicine and Primary Care, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, MA
CPOE: Evidence-Based Medicine or Doing Harm?
Dr. Brent Fox, PharmD, PhD, Associate Professor, Pharmacy Care Systems
eMARs, Smart Pumps, and Barcoding at the Point of Care: Is There Evidence?
Saverio Mark Maviglia, M.D., M.S., Physician Scientist, Partners HealthCare System, Boston, MA
Preventing Dispensing Errors with Barcoding
John Poikonen,
PharmD, Director, Outpatient Pharmacy Services,
Umass Memorial Medical Center
I currently report to the Chief Pharmacy Officer and the Chief Information Officer for a large academic medical center. We have worked out a reasonable and equitable working and reporting relationship
|
Andr Seger,
PharmD, RPh, Senior Research Pharmacist,
Brigham & Women's Hospital
Dr. Andrew C. Seger currently practices as a Senior Research Pharmacist at the Division of General Medicine & Primary Care at Brigham & Women’s Hospital in Boston MA. He also holds appointments as a Senior Research Pharmacist at Clinical & Quality Analysis, Information Systems at Partners Healthcare Systems and as a Consultant Pharmacist at The Center for Patient Safety at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston.
He received his BS Pharmacy in 1984 and PharmD in 2003, both from Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences. He is the site co-ordinator for The Specialized Fellowship in Outcomes Research/Pharmacy Informatics at Brigham & Women’s Hospital and Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences.
He is also an editor of the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) Ambulatory Care Newsletter and a member of The United States Pharmacopeia’s Medication Error Data Analysis ad hoc Advisory Panel. He is the co-chair of the American Medical Informatics Association’s Pharmaco-Informatics Working Group.
He is an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Pharmacy Practice at the Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences where he currently is teaching “Medication Safety” and a Visiting Clinical Assistant Professor at Virginia Commonwealth University’s School of Pharmacy. He has authored peer-reviewed articles in JAMA, The New England Journal of Medicine, Annals of Internal Medicine and Drug Safety and Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association(JAMIA).
|
Description
Learning Objectives:
Describe the problems of applying results of technology studies from one site to another. List two or three studies that support and do not support the technologies of CPOE, eMAR, barcoding, and adverse drug event detection. Identify the failure point in technology implementations that have led to potential patient harm.