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Use Case Example

The document describes a usage narrative for a hospital pharmacy system. The pharmacy fills prescriptions written by doctors, checks for errors or allergies, and distributes the medications to the appropriate nurse station. If issues are found, the pharmacist contacts the doctor. Once filled, a label is generated and information is entered into patient and billing databases. This usage narrative can then be used to develop a use case template for the pharmacy system.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
298 views6 pages

Use Case Example

The document describes a usage narrative for a hospital pharmacy system. The pharmacy fills prescriptions written by doctors, checks for errors or allergies, and distributes the medications to the appropriate nurse station. If issues are found, the pharmacist contacts the doctor. Once filled, a label is generated and information is entered into patient and billing databases. This usage narrative can then be used to develop a use case template for the pharmacy system.

Uploaded by

bernadetteElzr
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Use Case Example

Usage Narrative -- An
Example

Suppose youve been asked to work as a


business or systems analyst on a new system
to track pharmacy functions in a hospital.
You decide a good first step might be to
construct a usage narrative to begin the
analysis process.
On the next slide is an example of what you
might produce.

Example Usage Narrative -- Hospital Pharmacy


The Hospital Pharmacy fills prescriptions for the hospitals patients and distributes these to the
Nurse Station responsible for each patient. The prescription is written by the doctor and sent to
the pharmacy where the pharmacist reviews the prescription, checks the patient drug file to
determine the appropriateness, such as allergies the patient may have or errors in the
prescription (i.e. labor inducement medication prescribed to a male patient). The pharmacist
then fills the order if the dosage is safe, there are no known patient allergies to the drug, and
the drug does not interact with other drugs the patient is taking.
If the pharmacist decides not to fill the order the doctor is contacted and advised of the
problem. The doctor then may decide to have the order filled anyway or the doctor may write
another prescription and resubmit it to the pharmacy.
Once the prescription is filled a label is generated with the patient information (patient ID
number, patient name, room number, doctor name etc), prescription information (drug name,
amount dispensed, dosage) and medical information (instructions). The label is put on the drug
container. The Patient ID and new drug information (drug, dosage, RX #) are entered by the
pharmacy into the Patient Drug File. The patient ID number, drug name, amount dispensed
and cost of the drug are entered by the pharmacy into the on-line cost center system. The drug
container (with drug) and the corresponding order are then sent to the appropriate Nurse
Station to be administered to the patient

From Narrative to Use Case


Once the usage narrative is written and
validated, it can be used as the
foundation for a use case
Employing our use case template, the
pharmacy usage narrative might
produce the following use case.

Rx System Use Case

Main Success Scenario


1. Doctor enters Rx into system
2. System checks Rx for accuracy
3. Dispense and send label information to Nurses
Station
4. Patient receives Rx
5. System updates Billing and Patient DB
Needed Extensions:
2a. System detects inaccuracy
2b. System sends review back to doctor
2c. Doctor resends RX (with or without changes)

Rx System Use Case (continued)


Other Extensions/Exceptions
1a. Doctor not authorized or this patient
1a1. Rx denied
2a. System detects allergy conflict
2a1. Sends Rx back to doctor
2b. System detects Rx interaction
2b1. Sends Rx back to doctor
2c. System detects Rx duplicate dose
2c1. Sends Rx back to doctor
2d. System detects low or no inventory
2d1. Sends Rx back to doctor.
3a. Rx sent to wrong Nurses Station
3a1. Nurse denies/refuses Rx
3a1a. Sends Rx back to doctor
4a. Patient status changed
Special Conditions:
4a1. Nurse denies/refuses Rx
Total system failure or Power loss
4a1a. Sends Rx back to doctor
** Revert to manual system

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