| Literature DB >> 24894078 |
Teryl K Nuckols1, Crystal Smith-Spangler, Sally C Morton, Steven M Asch, Vaspaan M Patel, Laura J Anderson, Emily L Deichsel, Paul G Shekelle.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act subsidizes implementation by hospitals of electronic health records with computerized provider order entry (CPOE), which may reduce patient injuries caused by medication errors (preventable adverse drug events, pADEs). Effects on pADEs have not been rigorously quantified, and effects on medication errors have been variable. The objectives of this analysis were to assess the effectiveness of CPOE at reducing pADEs in hospital-related settings, and examine reasons for heterogeneous effects on medication errors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24894078 PMCID: PMC4096499 DOI: 10.1186/2046-4053-3-56
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Figure 1Summary of evidence search and selection.
Characteristics of included studies
| Bizovi | USA | 1 (560) | Public | Academic | ED | 3.6 (visits) | Commercial (EmSTAT; CyberPlus) | Mandatory | Noned | Pre/post | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders |
| Franklin | UK | 1 (-) | (Probably public) | Academic | General surgery ward | 64.9 | Commercial (ServeRx V.1:13; MDG Medical) | Mandatory | None | Pre/post | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders, medical record review, and incident reporting |
| Shawahna | Pakistan | 1 (1280) | Public | Academic | 2 medical wards | 83.8 | Homegrown | Mandatory | None | Pre/post | Medical record review (R) |
| Shulman | UK | 1 (-) | Public | Academic | General ICU | 41.1 | Commercial (QS 5.6 Clinical Information System; GE Healthcare) | Not stated | None | Pre/post | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders |
| Leung | USA | 6 (100 to 300 each) | – | Community | Hospital-wide | 42.3 | Commercial (not stated) | Not stated | Present | Pre/post | Medical record and order review (B, R) |
| Wess | USA | 2 (665 and 555) | Private | Academic, Community | General surgery, Orthopedic/neurosurgical units | – | Commercial (LastWord®; GE, formerly IDX) | Mandatory (n = 1) and voluntary (n = 1) | Present | Pre/post | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders, with changes signed by MD |
| Taylor | USA | 3 (1000 in total) | Private | Academic | Hospital-wide | – | Not stated | Not stated | Present | Pre/post | Quarterly review of subset of medication orders |
| Barron | USA | 1 (525) | Private | Academic | Hospital-wide | 10.4 | Homegrown | Mandatory | Basic | Pre/post | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders |
| Bates | USA | 1 (726) | Private | Academic | 2 medical and 2 surgical wards, 2 ICUs | 4.9 | Homegrown | Mandatory | Basic | Pre/post | Medical record review and other means (B, R) |
| Van Doormal | The Nether-lands | 2 (1300 and 600) | – | Academic | 2 medical wards at each hospital | 99.9 | Commercial (Medicator®; iSoft), Partly Homegrown (Theriak®), | Mandatory | Basic | Pre/post | Medical record and order review |
| Westbrook | Australia | 2 (400 and 326) | – | Academic | 4 medical wards at one hospital; 1 cardiology and 1 psychiatry unit at the other hospital | 99.7 | Commercial (Millenium Power Orders; Cerner and MedChart; iSoft) | Exceptions allowed | Basic | Differences in differences | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders (R) |
| Weant | USA | 1 (489) | Public | Academic | Neurosurgical ICU | – | Not stated | Not stated | Moderated | Pre/post | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders, incident reporting |
| Bates | USA | 1 (700) | Private | Academic | 2 medical wards and 1 ICU | 47.3 | Homegrown | Mandatory | Moderate | Pre/post | Medical record and order review plus other means |
| Colpaert | Belgium | 1 (-) | – | Academic | 3 units within a surgical ICU | 98.0 | Commercial (Centricity Critical Care Clinisoft; GE Healthcare Europe) | Mandatory | Moderate | Comparison of similar units | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders (B) |
| Mahoney | USA | 2 (247 and 719) | Private | Academic | Hospital-wide | – | Commercial (Siemens Medical Solutions CPOE; Siemens Medical Solutions Health Services Corp) | Exceptions allowed | Moderate | Pre/post | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders, with changes accepted by MD; incident reporting |
| Oliven | Israel | 1 (450) | Public | Academic | Pulmonary service | 62.1 | Homegrown | Not stated | Moderate | Compare similar units | Medical record and order review |
| Igboechi | USA | 1 (350) | Private | Community | Hospital-wide | – | Commercial (Ulticare System Database; Per Se Technologies | Mandatory | Moderate | Pre/post | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders |
| Aronsky | USA | 1 (658) | Private | Academic | ED | 99.8 (visits) | Homegrown (WizOrder, later commercial-ized as Horizon Expert Orders; McKesson) | Not stated | Advancedd | Pre/post | Routine pharmacist review of medication orders |
| Mendendez | Spain | 1 (200) | – | Academic | Hospital-wide | 5.0 | Commercial (Selene; Siemens) | Not stated | Advanced d | Pre/post | Trigger tool medical record review, incident reporting, and other means |
CDSS, Clinical Decision Support Systems; CPOE, computerized provider order entry; ED, emergency department; ICU, intensive care unit.
aPercentage of hospitalizations (or emergency department visits, where noted).
bNone = no clinical decision support system; basic = checks for drug-allergy and drug-drug interaction; moderate = basic plus at least one additional clinical decision support function; advanced = moderate plus additional capabilities [71].
cT = paper described training of reviewers; B = paper described blinding of reviewers to baseline versus CPOE conditions; R = Paper described methods for assessing reviewer reliability. If none of symbols appear, these were not described.
dInformation on CDSS obtained by contacting authors.
eOmitted from pooled effect calculations due to lack of data related to estimating variance.
Figure 2Meta-analysis: relative risk of preventable adverse drug events using computerized provider order entry (CPOE) versus paper-order entry in hospital acute care settings. Units of exposure: *1,000 patient days; †admissions.
Figure 3Meta-analysis: relative risk of medication errors using computerized provider order entry (CPOE) versus paper-order entry in hospital acute care settings. Units of exposure: *1,000 patient days; †orders; ‡dispensed doses; §admissions.