| Literature DB >> 16469126 |
Kirsten Colpaert1, Barbara Claus, Annemie Somers, Koenraad Vandewoude, Hugo Robays, Johan Decruyenaere.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Medication errors in the intensive care unit (ICU) are frequent and lead to attributable patient morbidity and mortality, increased length of ICU stay and substantial extra costs. We investigated if the introduction of a computerized ICU system (Centricity Critical Care Clinisoft, GE Healthcare) reduced the incidence and severity of medication prescription errors (MPEs).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16469126 PMCID: PMC1550814 DOI: 10.1186/cc3983
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Descriptions of level of severity of medication prescription errors
| Major divisions | Numeric scale | Description (NCC MERP scale) |
| Minor MPE | 0 | Incomplete order, no potential to cause harm (A) |
| Intercepted MPE | 0,5 | Potential error, intercepted, error did not reach the patient (B) |
| Serious MPE | ||
| N-I potential ADE | 1 | Error reached the patient, but caused no harm (C) |
| ADE | 2 | Error occurred, resulted in increased patient monitoring, but no harm to the patient (D) |
| 3 | Error occurred with change in vital signs, increased need of monitoring or laboratory tests, eventually no harm (D) | |
| 3.5 | Error occurred with temporary harm, needing treatment/intervention (E) | |
| 4 | Error occurred with temporary harm, needing treatment with another drug, increased length of stay or required intervention to prevent permanent impairment or damage (F) | |
| 5 | Error occurred and resulted in permanent patient harm (G) | |
| 5.5 | Error occurred and resulted in near death event (H) | |
| 6 | Error occurred and resulted in patient death (I) |
MPE, medication prescribing error (an error in the prescribing or monitoring of a drug); for example, an order written for aminoglycosides, without ordering a drug plasma level, or without a route of administration. Minor MPE: minor medication prescription error (an MPE that has no potential to cause harm); for example, an abbreviation or a missing route of administration. Intercepted MPE: an MPE that has the potential to cause patient harm but did not because the error was intercepted in time. N-I Potential ADE: non-intercepted potential ADE. ADE: adverse drug event; these are further specified according to level of severity (level 2 to 6). The N-I potential ADEs and ADEs consist of serious errors because they have the potential to or actually cause injury and, therefore, are the most important from the perspective of patient safety. For this reason, these two groups are joined into one serious MPE group. The National Coordinating Council for Medication Error Reporting and Prevention (NCC MERP) scale is mentioned for comparative purposes.
Patient characteristics
| Characteristic | C-U (80 patient-days) | PB-U (80 patient-days) | |
| Age (years) | 61.5 (45–71) | 54 (37–65) | 0.021 |
| Drug prescriptions | 17 (11–20) | 15 (12.25–18) | 0.386 |
| APACHE II | 20 (15–30) | 20 (16–24) | 0.275 |
| SOFA | 5 (3–9) | 6 (4–8) | 0.267 |
| Renal failure (%) | 31.2 | 37.5 | 0.407 |
| LOS | 2 (1–8) | 5 (2–9) | 0.016 |
Data are expressed as median with interquartile range in parentheses. Drug prescriptions is the number of drug prescriptions at screening day. APACHE II is the acute physiology and chronic health evaluation score at day 0. SOFA is the sepsis-related organ failure assessment score at screening day. Renal failure is creatinine clearance <50 ml/minute. LOS, length of stay at screening day. C-U, computerized unit; PB-U, paper-based unit.
Medication prescription error analysis in computerized and paper-based units
| Computerized unit | Paper-based unit | ||
| Total prescriptions ( | 1,286 | 1,224 | NS |
| Total MPEs ( | 44 | 331 | <0.001 |
| % MPEs | 3.4 | 27.0 | <0.001 |
| Minor MPEs | 9 | 225 | <0.001 |
| Per 100 orders | 0.7 | 18 | |
| Intercepted MPEs ( | 12 | 46 | <0.001 |
| Per 100 orders | 0.9 | 3.8 | |
| Non-intercepted potential ADEs (n) | 21 | 48 | <0.001 |
| Per 100 orders | 1.6 | 3.9 | |
| Total ADEs ( | 2 | 12 | <0.01 |
| Per 100 orders | 0.15 | 1.0 | |
| Intercepted MPEs and serious MPEs | 35 | 106 | <0.001 |
| Serious MPEs | 23 | 60 | <0.001 |
ADE, adverse drug event; MPE, medication prescription error; NS, not significant.
Figure 1Scatter plot of number of medication prescribing errors (MPEs) at screening day according to number of drug orders per patient (24 hour screening day).
Figure 2Types of intercepted medication prescribing errors (MPEs) and serious MPEs. Dose, dosing error; Rate, wrong infusion rate of continuous medication; Route, wrong route of administration; Name, error in drug name; Interaction, drug-drug interaction error; Allergy, known allergy to prescribed drug; Double presc., double prescriptions; Monitoring, drug monitoring error; Others, errors in posology, concentration, contra-indication.