Literature DB >> 21735951

Medication errors in primary care in Riyadh City, Saudi Arabia.

T Khoja1, Y Neyaz, N A Qureshi, M A Magzoub, A Haycox, T Walley.   

Abstract

Medication errors can cause a variety of adverse drug events but are potentially preventable. This cross-sectional study analysed all medication prescriptions from 5 public and 5 private primary health care clinics in Riyadh city, collected by simple random sampling during 1 working day. Prescriptions for 2463 and 2836 drugs from public and private clinics respectively were examined for errors, which were analysed using Neville et al.'s classification of prescription errors. Prescribing errors were found on 990/5299 (18.7%) prescriptions. Both type B and type C errors (major and minor nuisance) were more often associated with prescriptions from public than private clinics. Type D errors (trivial) were significantly more likely to occur with private health sector prescriptions. Type A errors (potentially serious) were rare (8/5299 drugs; 0.15%) and the rate did not differ significantly between the 2 health sectors. The development of preventive strategies for avoiding prescription errors is crucial.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21735951

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  East Mediterr Health J        ISSN: 1020-3397            Impact factor:   1.628


  20 in total

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7.  Medication Error Concept and Reporting Practices in Saudi Arabia: A Multiregional Study Among Healthcare Professionals.

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Review 9.  Medication errors in the Middle East countries: a systematic review of the literature.

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10.  Prevalence of medication errors in primary health care at Bahrain Defence Force Hospital - prescription-based study.

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