RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Prescribe, Review, Now!: an assessment of adequate PRN analgesia and associated laxative prescribing using Hospital Electronic Prescribing and Medicines Administration (HEPMA) JF BMJ Open Quality JO BMJ Open Qual FD British Medical Journal Publishing Group SP e002090 DO 10.1136/bmjoq-2022-002090 VO 12 IS 1 A1 McMillan, Matthew A1 Burgess, Alexandra Jayne YR 2023 UL http://bmjopenquality.bmj.com/content/12/1/e002090.abstract AB Introduction On HEPMA there is no way to notify a prescriber if patients are regularly accessing PRN (as-required) analgesia. We aimed to assess how well PRN analgesia use is identified, the WHO analgesic ladder and whether laxatives were prescribed with opioid analgesia.Methods 3 data collection cycles were carried out for all medical inpatients between February-April 2022. Medication was reviewed to determine: 1) PRN analgesia prescribed? 2) Is the patient accessing it >3 times in 24hours? 3) Con-current laxatives prescribed. Between each cycle, an intervention was implemented. Intervention 1: Posters were placed on each ward and circulated electronically as a cue to a review and change analgesia “Prescribe. Review. Now!” Intervention 2: A presentation on data, the WHO analgesic ladder and laxative prescribing was created, and circulated.Results See Figure 1 – Comparison of prescribing per cycle. Cycle 1 - 167 inpatients surveyed, 58%female, 42%male, mean age 78(±13.4). Cycle 2 - 159 inpatients,65% female, 35% male, mean age of 77 (±15.7). Cycle 3 - 157 inpatients, 62% female, 38% male, mean age 78 (±15.7). Adequate prescriptions on HEPMA improved by a total of 31% (p<0.005), over 3 cycles and 2 interventions.Conclusions After each intervention there was a significant statistical improvement in prescribing analgesia and laxatives. However, there is still room for further improvement, especially in ensuring adequate laxative cover is prescribed for all patients either >65 years old, or those on opioid-based analgesia. Visual reminders on wards of regularly checking PRN medication showed to be an effective intervention.