Interrater reliability and ease of use of the High-Alert Medication Stratification Tool‒Revised Prospective (HAMST-R PRO): A prospective, multisite study

Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2022 Feb 8;79(4):218-229. doi: 10.1093/ajhp/zxab407.

Abstract

Objective: The High-Alert Medication Stratification Tool‒Revised (HAMST-R) was originally designed to standardize the identification of high-alert medications (HAMs) according to safety risk. The primary objective of this multisite study was to assess interrater reliability of the HAMST-R PRO, a version of the tool designed to prospectively evaluate safety risk of medications during evaluation for formulary addition.

Methods: HAMST-R was designed as an objective tool to evaluate HAMs at a single site during the HAMST-R phase I study. Phase II of the study demonstrated the validity of the tool in a multisite, national study. In this third study, 11 medication safety experts from 8 health systems across the United States and 1 in Canada facilitated evaluation of medications prospectively with the HAMST-R PRO during the formulary review process for 27 medications. At each site, at least 5 individuals were asked to review each medication. Interrater reliability was evaluated using Kendall's coefficient of concordance. Ease of use was determined by participant interviews.

Results: Overall interrater reliability for HAMST-R PRO was found to be 0.76 (P < 0.001) across all sites, indicating substantial agreement between users. Interrater reliability among individual sites ranged from 0.52 to 0.82 (P < 0.05 for all sites).

Conclusion: Interrater reliability of HAMST-R PRO is substantial, indicating consistency and agreement among pharmacists utilizing this tool to evaluate safety risk of medications before their addition to a health-system formulary. This information can be used to identify potential interventions for each step of the medication-use process that institutions may implement to decrease a medication's potential safety risk.

Keywords: high-alert medications; medication errors; medication safety; medication use process; patient safety; risk evaluation and mitigation.

Publication types

  • Clinical Trial, Phase I

MeSH terms

  • Canada
  • Humans
  • Pharmacists*
  • Prospective Studies
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • United States