| Literature DB >> 26958264 |
Raymonde Charles Y Uy1, Fabricio P Kury1, Paul A Fontelo1.
Abstract
The standard of safe medication practice requires strict observance of the five rights of medication administration: the right patient, drug, time, dose, and route. Despite adherence to these guidelines, medication errors remain a public health concern that has generated health policies and hospital processes that leverage automation and computerization to reduce these errors. Bar code, RFID, biometrics and pharmacy automation technologies have been demonstrated in literature to decrease the incidence of medication errors by minimizing human factors involved in the process. Despite evidence suggesting the effectivity of these technologies, adoption rates and trends vary across hospital systems. The objective of study is to examine the state and adoption trends of automatic identification and data capture (AIDC) methods and pharmacy automation technologies in U.S. hospitals. A retrospective descriptive analysis of survey data from the HIMSS Analytics® Database was done, demonstrating an optimistic growth in the adoption of these patient safety solutions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26958264 PMCID: PMC4765644
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMIA Annu Symp Proc ISSN: 1559-4076