Literature DB >> 22278633

Profiling harmful medication errors in an acute Irish teaching hospital.

E C Relihan1, S A Ryder, B Silke.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Medication error reporting systems in hospitals are faced with the challenge of processing vast numbers of reports which identify a myriad of safety issues. With such large volumes of data and limited resources it makes sense to adopt a prioritisation approach. Several published studies have focused solely on the subset of errors which cause patient harm. The majority of such research has concerned the individual analysis of criteria associated with medication errors. However, the research described here used an alternative approach which involved linking the three criteria of medication class, patient outcome, and type of error, in order to describe the medication-related scenarios presenting greatest risk to the organisation. AIMS: To identify the highest-priority medication-related risks in an acute teaching hospital. To profile harmful medication errors submitted to a voluntary reporting system in a tertiary healthcare setting in Ireland.
METHODS: A database of medication errors, reported via an internal voluntary reporting system over a 5-year period, was analysed. The criteria of medication class, patient outcome and type of error were analysed separately and then cross-tabulated.
RESULTS: The medication classes, error types and adverse patient outcomes most frequently associated with harm were identified. The cross-tabulation highlighted ten priority risk areas which accounted for the majority of patient harm.
CONCLUSIONS: A cross-tabulation strategy for prioritising medication-associated risks was successfully applied to a hospital database comprising medication errors. The profile developed for harmful medication errors in this acute tertiary healthcare setting was broadly in line with that published for error reporting systems internationally.

Entities:  

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22278633     DOI: 10.1007/s11845-012-0804-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ir J Med Sci        ISSN: 0021-1265            Impact factor:   1.568


  6 in total

1.  Nature and causes of clinically significant medication errors in a tertiary care hospital.

Authors:  Almut G Winterstein; Thomas E Johns; Eric I Rosenberg; Randy C Hatton; Ricardo Gonzalez-Rothi; Penkarn Kanjanarat
Journal:  Am J Health Syst Pharm       Date:  2004-09-15       Impact factor: 2.637

2.  Identifying clinically significant preventable adverse drug events through a hospital's database of adverse drug reaction reports.

Authors:  Almut G Winterstein; Randy C Hatton; Ricardo Gonzalez-Rothi; Thomas E Johns; Richard Segal
Journal:  Am J Health Syst Pharm       Date:  2002-09-15       Impact factor: 2.637

3.  National collaborative: Top five drugs reported as causing harm through medication error in pediatrics.

Authors:  Marg Colquhoun; Elaine Orrbine; Ian Sheppard; Lisa Stromquist; Christine Koczmara; Roger Cheng; Julie Greenall; Bonnie Salsman; Shirley Sabovitch
Journal:  Dynamics       Date:  2009

4.  Medication safety in hospitals.

Authors:  C Kirke
Journal:  Ir Med J       Date:  2009 Nov-Dec

5.  Incidence of adverse drug events and potential adverse drug events. Implications for prevention. ADE Prevention Study Group.

Authors:  D W Bates; D J Cullen; N Laird; L A Petersen; S D Small; D Servi; G Laffel; B J Sweitzer; B F Shea; R Hallisey
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1995-07-05       Impact factor: 56.272

Review 6.  Nature of preventable adverse drug events in hospitals: a literature review.

Authors:  Penkarn Kanjanarat; Almut G Winterstein; Thomas E Johns; Randy C Hatton; Ricardo Gonzalez-Rothi; Richard Segal
Journal:  Am J Health Syst Pharm       Date:  2003-09-01       Impact factor: 2.637

  6 in total

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