| Literature DB >> 19671158 |
Elizabeth E Roughead1, Susan J Semple.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This paper presents Part 1 of a two-part literature review examining medication safety in the Australian acute care setting. This review was undertaken for the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care to update a previous national report on medication safety conducted in 2002. This first part of the review examines the extent and causes of medication incidents and adverse drug events in acute care.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19671158 PMCID: PMC2733897 DOI: 10.1186/1743-8462-6-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aust New Zealand Health Policy ISSN: 1743-8462
Preventability of adverse medicine events associated with hospitalisation or admissions due to medication-related problems
| Titchen et al., 2005 [ | Hospital Paediatric NSAID ADRs | 25 | 36% | ||
| Easton et al., 2004 [ | Paediatric admissions | 81 | 46.9% | 30.9% | |
| Easton-Carter et al., 2003 [ | Paediatric emergency department attendances | 187 | 51.3% | 36.9% | |
| Chan et al., 2001 [ | Geriatric admissions | 73 | 53.4 | 23.3 | 23.3 |
| Lau et al., 2004 [ | Hospital Oncology ADRs | 454 | 1.6% | 46.1% | 53.4% |
| Dartnell et al 1996 [ | General admissions | 55* | 5% | 60% | 35% |
| Sarkawi et al, 1995 [ | Medical admissions | 35* | 23% | 46% | 31% |
| Easton 1998 [ | Paediatric admissions | 48*+ | # | 67% | 29% |
| Ng 1996 [ | Geriatric admissions | 31 | 3% | 29% | 68% |
* – overdose excluded; # – category not used; + – 2 cases not assessable. ADRs = adverse drug reactions; NSAID = non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug. Note: estimates of adverse drug event preventability in the community from one study were 23% [9].
Medication incident reports, SA, WA and NSW
| 26999 | 23189 | 21693 | 20799 | 123404 | |
| 7155 (26.5%) | 23.5%# | 24.0%# | 5068 (24.4%) | 17367 (14.1%) | |
| No injury | 69%@ | 87.0% | 85.0% | 85.0% | 82%* |
| Omission | 27.9% | 36.0% | 36.0% | 37.0% | |
| Overdose | 19.5% | 18.0% | 17.0% | 19.0% | |
| Prescription or order error | 14.0% | ||||
| Unclear or incomplete order | 6.0% | ||||
| Dispensing error | 3.3% | 2.0% | |||
| Failure to read or misread | 52% | 49.0% | 36.0% | ||
| Failure to follow policy | 23.0% | 26.0% | |||
| Cardiovascular; Analgesics, CNS, Endocrine, Antibiotics | Analgesics; Anticoagulants Diuretics; Respiratory; Proton Pump inhibitors | Analgesics; Anticoagulants; Diuretics; Steroids | Analgesics; Anticoagulants; Insulins; Diuretics | ||
@ = none or minor; # = estimated from graph; * = Severity Assessment Code (SAC) 3 or SAC 4
Medication incident rates in specific practice areas
| Freestone et al., 2006 [ | Anaesthetic incidents | 4441 procedures | 10 | 0.2% of procedures |
| Chacko et al., 2007 [ | Critical incidents in intensive care | 8346 ICU days | 42 | 0.5 per 100 ICU days |
| Parke 2006 [ | Medication use in a district hospital | 24174 medication dispensings | 425 | 1.8% |
Types of errors: Prescription errors: Australian hospitals 1985–2007
| Coombes et al. 2004 [ | 605 medications on 100 hand written prescriptions | 30 (5.0% of medications) | The most common types of errors were omissions (2.6%) and dosing errors (0.8%). |
| Coombes et al. 2004 [ | 700 medications on 100 computer generated prescriptions | 81 errors (11.6% of medications) | The most common types of errors were dosing errors (3.6%), duration errors (1.9%), medication not required on discharge (2.1%) and omissions (1.7%). |
| Coombes et al., 2001 [ | 2978 prescriptions | 71 (2.4%)errors with potential to cause an ADE | The most common error types found were wrong or ambiguous dose (1.0% of prescriptions), dose absent from prescription (0.6% of prescriptions), frequency absent from prescription (0.4% of prescriptions*) |
| Dawson et al., 1993 [ | 212 medication charts# | 52 major errors** (24.5% of med'n charts) | The most common error types were dose errors (12.3% of charts reviewed), error of administration frequency (5.7% of charts reviewed), error of administration route (5.2% of charts reviewed), error in drug name/formulation (1.4% of charts reviewed). |
| Dawson et al., 1993 [ | 325 medication charts# | 35 major errors** (10.8% of med'n charts) | The most common error types were dose errors (4.9% of charts reviewed), error of administration route (2.5% of charts reviewed), error of administration frequency (1.8% of charts reviewed), error in drug name/formulation (1.5% of charts reviewed). |
| Leversha, 1991 [ | 6641 medication chart checks | 241 (3.6% of chart checks) | Prescribing errors detected were incorrect dose (1.2% of chart checks), no strength specified (1.0%), insufficient information (0.2%). It was also found that failure to record the patient's current (ongoing) medication on the chart occurred in 69 cases (1.0% of chart checks) |
| Fry et al., 1985 [ | 10 562 prescriptions | 574 (5.4%), | Included assessment of legal requirements, (eg patient name and address, doctor's signature) as well as clinical requirements (eg dose, frequency,) The strength was missing or incorrect in 0.7%, the directions inappropriate or omitted in 0.4%, and the wrong drug in 0.06%. |
* Percentage of prescriptions for regular and 'as required" medications only; ** Major errors included errors in drug name, dose, formulation, route or frequency of administration; #Note: unit of analysis is medication chart, which may include one or more prescriptions.
Medication administration errors: Australian hospitals 1988–2007
| Stewart et al., 1991 [ | 2017 | 369 (18.3%) | 75 (3.7%) | 46 (2.3%) | 82 (4.1%) | 6 (0.3%) | 160 (7.9%) |
| McNally et al., 1997 [ | 494 | 76 (15.4%) | 22* (4.5%) | 20 (4.0%) | 13 (2.6%) | 2 (0.4%) | 19 (3.8%) |
| Lawler et al. 2004 [ | 4887 | Omission only assessed | 369 (7.6%) | ||||
| Rippe and Hurley, 1988 [ | 312 | 52 (16.7%) | 24 (7.7%) | 6 (1.9%) | 12 (3.8%) | 3 (0.96%) | 7 (2.2%) |
| Camac et al., 1996 [ | 370† | 47 (12.7%) | 25 (6.8%) | N/G‡ | N/G‡ | N/G‡ | N/G‡ |
| de Clifford et al., 1994 [ | 164 | 10 (6.1%) | 1 (0.6%) | 2 (1.2%) | 5 (3.0%) | 0 | 2 (1.2%) |
| McNally et al., 1997 [ | 502 | 24 (4.8%) | 12* (2.4%) | 2 (0.4%) | 7 (1.4%) | 0 | 3 (0.6%) |
| Thornton and Koller 1994 [ | 242 | 20 (8.3%) | 2 (0.8%) | 0 | 13 (5.4%) | 0 | 5 (2.1%) |
| Han et al., 2005 [ | 687 | 124 (18%) | |||||
* Major timing errors included, minor timing errors excluded – a deviation of 2 or more hours from the ordered time. All other studies define a 'timing error' as a deviation of one or more hours from the ordered time.
† Total data using two different storage sites – ward bay medication drawer and patient's bedside locker.
‡ N/G – insufficient data given to calculate rate of individual error types