We are standardizing our medication allergy entry process in the EMR and would appreciate learning how your organizations handle this.
Current state at our site:
•Significant duplication (same agent documented as drug, class, and nicknames)
•Frequent use of “Other” for existing defaults
•No reaction documented
•No mandatory fields
Objective:
Provide end users with clear baseline guidance on minimum expectations for allergy entry, promote accuracy and clarity based on patient response, and establish a consistent process for resolving discrepancies.
Questions for the community:
1.What policy or standard operating procedure (SOP) does your organization have for medication allergy documentation?
2.Do you incorporate cutaneous reaction images or visual aids to help distinguish between allergy reaction type (rash, hives, SJS/TENS, etc.)?
3.How do you clarify patient-reported ambiguity or conflicting information during documentation?
4.Are you using any EMR widgets, alerts, smart phrases, or decision-support tools to drive consistent documentation?
5.What clinical references or guidelines do you cite in your policy (e.g., NIH, ASHP, ISMP, or others)?
Thank you in advance for sharing your processes and any lessons learned. This is an area where we know many organizations have made meaningful improvements in both patient safety and documentation quality. I will share responses after collating.
Note: This is another great ISMP discussion topic in larger forum, effects every patient on every admission.
Regards, Scott
