Articles

Safe Deprescribing in Community Care: Governance, Documentation, and Primary Care Partnership
Deprescribing is not simply “reducing medications”—it is a structured risk-management pathway that must be clinically accountable and auditable. This article explains how community providers support safe deprescribing with primary care, including review criteria, taper plans, monitoring, and closed-loop follow-through. Read more...
Medication Adherence, Consent, and Risk in Community-Based Care: Balancing Autonomy and Safety
Medication adherence work is not enforcement—it’s risk management that respects consent, capacity, and individual choice. This article explains how community providers assess adherence risk, respond to refusal safely, and coordinate with primary care so autonomy is protected without allowing preventable deterioration or crisis escalation. Read more...
Medication Errors, Near Misses, and Learning Systems in Community-Based Care
Medication errors in community settings are rarely individual failures; they reflect system design weaknesses. This article explores how providers build learning systems that capture errors and near misses, translate insight into safer workflows, and reduce repeat harm without blame. Read more...
Clinical Accountability for Medication Decisions in Multi-Provider Community Care Systems
Medication decisions in community care frequently span hospitals, primary care, specialists, pharmacies, and in-home providers. This article examines how effective systems establish clear clinical accountability, prevent decision drift, and ensure medication-related risk is actively owned rather than dispersed across providers. Read more...
PRN Medication Governance in Community Settings: Preventing Hidden Polypharmacy and Escalation
PRN medications can quietly drive sedation, falls, delirium, constipation, and avoidable ED use—especially when use isn’t tracked or reviewed. This article explains how community providers govern PRNs with structured documentation, review triggers, primary care accountability, and audit-ready safeguards. Read more...
Medication Support After Hospital Discharge: Preventing Polypharmacy Drift in the First 14 Days
The first two weeks after discharge are when medication lists drift, duplications reappear, and patients get harmed by confusion, access barriers, and untracked changes. This article explains how community providers run a 14-day stabilization workflow—closing information gaps, routing decisions to primary care, and verifying execution. Read more...
After-Hours Medication Risk Management in Community Services: Weekend Coverage, On-Call Decisions, and Emergency Avoidance
Medication problems rarely wait for office hours. This article explains how community providers manage after-hours medication risk—triaging urgent issues, accessing prescriber decisions, preventing duplication, and documenting closed-loop actions—so weekends and evenings don’t become a predictable pathway to ED use. Read more...
Medication Monitoring and Lab Follow-Up in Community Care: Building a Reliable Test-and-Act Loop
Medication-related harm often occurs when monitoring is ordered but not completed, results are missed, or action is delayed. This article explains how community providers run a test-and-act loop—tracking labs and vitals, escalating results to primary care, and verifying execution—so monitoring becomes a safety control, not a paperwork task. Read more...
Pharmacy Partnership and Refill Control in Community Care: Preventing Medication Drift Between Reviews
Medication regimens often drift between clinical reviews due to refills, substitutions, partial fills, and untracked PRN use. This article explains how community providers partner with pharmacies and primary care to control refills, verify dispensing, and spot early risk—reducing preventable harm and avoidable escalation. Read more...
Building a Single Medication “Source of Truth” in Community Care: List Governance Across Providers and Settings
Medication harm often starts with a basic problem: no one can confirm which medication list is correct. This article explains how community providers establish a single “source of truth,” reconcile differences across prescribers and settings, and run list-governance workflows that keep primary care accountable and reduce avoidable escalation. Read more...
Clinical Accountability for Medication Decisions in Multi-Provider Systems
Medication decisions in community care often span multiple professionals and organizations. This article explores how providers establish clear clinical accountability across fragmented systems to reduce risk and improve outcomes. Read more...
Medication Errors, Near Misses, and Learning Systems in Community Care
Medication errors in community settings are rarely individual failures. This article examines how high-performing providers design learning systems that identify, respond to, and reduce medication errors and near misses without blame. Read more...