Optimizing the Medication Trajectory: A Multidisciplinary Framework for High-Reliability Prescribing, Administration, and Pharmacovigilance

Waleed Abdullah Alhabeeb (1) , Layth Talal Raji Alabdali (2) , Hassan Abdullah Hassan Kuriri (3) , Meshari Rushaydan Almutairi (4) , Abdulmajeed Abdulrahman Alanazi (5) , Noof Makrb Alfuhaigi (6) , Najah Atallah Alanazi (7) , Ibrahim Mohammed Abddullah Safhi (8) , Hassan Ali Hassan Albariqi (9) , Jaber Abdullah Ahmed Alkhaldi (10) , Mohammed Mujahid Ateeq Alkuwaykibi (11) , Mazen Khulaif Buthul Alruwaili (12)
(1) Maternity and Children's Hospital – Alhasa,Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(2) Ministry Of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(3) Al-Harth General Hospital – Jazan,Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(4) Fifth Al-Hasso General Hospital, Madinah Pool Scope,Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(5) Medina Health cluster, Al-Difaa Neighborhood Health, Center medina,Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(6) Prince Mutaib bin Abdulaziz Hospital, Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(7) Riffa Health Center in Al-Jouf, Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(8) Ahad almasareha General Hospital, Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(9) Eradah and Mental Health, Complex In Tabuk,Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(10) Department of Public Health,Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(11) Erada Hospital and Mental Health,Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia,
(12) Erada Hospital and Mental Health in Qurayyat,Ministry of Health, Saudi Arabia

Abstract

Background: Medication errors persist as a leading cause of preventable patient harm globally, despite advancements in healthcare technology and protocols. These errors occur not within isolated silos but across a complex, interdependent pathway involving multiple disciplines. Aim: This narrative review aims to synthesize current evidence (2015-2024) on the integrated, interdisciplinary process of medication management, focusing on strategies for error reduction and enhanced patient safety from prescription through to monitoring.
Methods: A comprehensive literature search was conducted across PubMed, Scopus, CINAHL, and Web of Science databases. The included literature comprised peer-reviewed articles, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and key grey literature from professional organizations, published between 2015 and 2024. Thematic analysis was used to synthesize findings across eight core healthcare domains: Pharmacy, Medical Laboratories, Nursing, Radiology, Health Services & Hospital Management, Health Assistant/Health Security, Disaster Management, and Hospital Management. Results: The review identifies that high-reliability is achieved not through individual excellence but through seamless interoperability between disciplines. Critical nodes include technology-supported prescribing, interdisciplinary medication reconciliation, diagnostic stewardship informing therapy, and robust post-administration surveillance. Fragmentation in communication, information system incompatibility, and inadequate cross-disciplinary training remain significant vulnerabilities. Conclusion: A truly high-reliability medication pathway requires a systemic, socio-technical approach that embeds safety culture, interoperable health information technology, and structured interdisciplinary collaboration at every stage. Future efforts must prioritize integrated system design over domain-specific optimization.

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Authors

Waleed Abdullah Alhabeeb
walhabeeb@moh.gov.sa (Primary Contact)
Layth Talal Raji Alabdali
Hassan Abdullah Hassan Kuriri
Meshari Rushaydan Almutairi
Abdulmajeed Abdulrahman Alanazi
Noof Makrb Alfuhaigi
Najah Atallah Alanazi
Ibrahim Mohammed Abddullah Safhi
Hassan Ali Hassan Albariqi
Jaber Abdullah Ahmed Alkhaldi
Mohammed Mujahid Ateeq Alkuwaykibi
Mazen Khulaif Buthul Alruwaili
Alhabeeb, W. A., Layth Talal Raji Alabdali, Hassan Abdullah Hassan Kuriri, Meshari Rushaydan Almutairi, Abdulmajeed Abdulrahman Alanazi, Noof Makrb Alfuhaigi, … Mazen Khulaif Buthul Alruwaili. (2024). Optimizing the Medication Trajectory: A Multidisciplinary Framework for High-Reliability Prescribing, Administration, and Pharmacovigilance. Saudi Journal of Medicine and Public Health, 1(2), 1543–1550. https://doi.org/10.64483/202412441

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