Mansour Tobaiqy1, Derek Stewart. 1. Ministry of Health, Patient Safety Department, The Maternity and Children's Hospital, Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a paucity of literature originating from the Middle East on medication errors. OBJECTIVE: To explore the experiences of healthcare professionals around medication errors and medication error reporting. Setting Saudi Arabia. METHOD: Questionnaire survey of those attending medication error continuing education sessions. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Experiences of medication errors in terms of number, type and severity in the preceding 12 months; barriers to reporting errors to health authorities; potential strategies to improve error reporting. RESULTS: Sixty-one (61/106, 57.5 %) questionnaires were completed. Thirty-five respondents (57.3 %) reported observing 51 errors during the preceding 12 months. Thirty-five errors (68.6 %) were described: wrong medication prescribed, dispensed or administered (11, 31.4 %); wrong dose prescribed (9, 25.7 %); inappropriate prescribing (issues of drug selection, monitoring) (9, 25.7 %); inappropriate route of administration (2), prescription duplication (2) and equipment failure (2). Patient outcomes resulting from these errors were described by the respondents as 'caused patient harm' in 14 instances. Three key barriers to reporting were: lack of awareness of the reporting policy; workload and time constraints associated with reporting; and unavailability of the reporting form. CONCLUSION: Findings indicate a potential need to review medication error reporting systems in Saudi Arabia to heighten health professional awareness and improve the reporting culture.
BACKGROUND: There is a paucity of literature originating from the Middle East on medication errors. OBJECTIVE: To explore the experiences of healthcare professionals around medication errors and medication error reporting. Setting Saudi Arabia. METHOD: Questionnaire survey of those attending medication error continuing education sessions. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Experiences of medication errors in terms of number, type and severity in the preceding 12 months; barriers to reporting errors to health authorities; potential strategies to improve error reporting. RESULTS: Sixty-one (61/106, 57.5 %) questionnaires were completed. Thirty-five respondents (57.3 %) reported observing 51 errors during the preceding 12 months. Thirty-five errors (68.6 %) were described: wrong medication prescribed, dispensed or administered (11, 31.4 %); wrong dose prescribed (9, 25.7 %); inappropriate prescribing (issues of drug selection, monitoring) (9, 25.7 %); inappropriate route of administration (2), prescription duplication (2) and equipment failure (2). Patient outcomes resulting from these errors were described by the respondents as 'caused patient harm' in 14 instances. Three key barriers to reporting were: lack of awareness of the reporting policy; workload and time constraints associated with reporting; and unavailability of the reporting form. CONCLUSION: Findings indicate a potential need to review medication error reporting systems in Saudi Arabia to heighten health professional awareness and improve the reporting culture.
Authors: Stephanie Archer; Louise Hull; Tayana Soukup; Erik Mayer; Thanos Athanasiou; Nick Sevdalis; Ara Darzi Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2017-12-27 Impact factor: 2.692