Private hospitals have separate documentation requirements for Medicare Australia and for pharmacy ordering, and face particular challenges because of this.
This is a two-sided A4 medication chart with no regular medicine order spaces.
Paediatric NIMC resources come in public and private hospital versions for acute and long stay.
The NIMC chart has been adapted into three different versions for adults, with Acute, Long stay and GP e-versions available.
Obtaining a best possible medication history (BPMH) is an important first step in medication reconciliation.
The National Medication Management Plan (NMMP) is a standardised medication reconciliation form used at hospital admission.
Antimicrobials are important medicines used to treat infections. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a serious threat to human health and patient safety. Hundreds of people in Australia die each year as a result of AMR.
The national inpatient medication charts (NIMC) and the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme hospital medication chart (PBS HMC) are standardised nationally, and are designed to communicate medication information consistently between healthcare professionals.
Download infographics for the Second Australian Atlas of Healthcare Variation.
The First Australian Atlas of Healthcare Variation, released in November 2015, examined six clinical themes covering prescribing, diagnostic, medical and surgical interventions.
The Second Australian Atlas of Healthcare Variation, released in 2017, examines 18 clinical items across four clinical themes: chronic disease and infection – potentially preventable hospitalisations, cardiovascular, women’s health and maternity, and surgical interventions.
The Commission has developed resources for consumers, clinicians and health services on the use of transvaginal mesh products for the treatment of pelvic organ prolapse (POP) and stress urinary incontinence (SUI) and mesh removal.
Decision support tools can encourage shared decision making by informing discussions between clinicians and consumers.
CARAlert collects, analyses and reports on nationally agreed priority organisms with critical resistances to last-line antimicrobials.
The Commission’s Antimicrobial Use and Resistance in Australia (AURA) Project contributes to the national program for surveillance of antimicrobial use and resistance in human health across Australia.
The Commission has prepared an information sheet about how care should be provided to people at the end of life in hospitals. It provides patients, family members, carers and consumers with useful information.
The Commission has developed a range of tools and resources to support health services to improve the safety and quality of end-of-life care.
A hospital-acquired complication (HAC) refers to a complication for which clinical risk mitigation strategies may reduce (but not necessarily eliminate) the risk of that complication occurring.
Getting the best outcomes for patients and reducing harm are the goals of the Atlas series. Each Atlas examines a series of health topics, investigates variation and the possible reasons for it, and provides specific achievable actions to reduce unwarranted variation.