Almuth Kaune1,2, Pia Madeleine Schumacher1,2, Sabine Christine Hoppe1,2, Steffen Syrbe3,4,5, Matthias Karl Bernhard3,4, Roberto Frontini1,6, Andreas Merkenschlager3,4, Wieland Kiess3,4, Martina Patrizia Neininger1,2, Astrid Bertsche3,4, Thilo Bertsche7,8. 1. Drug Safety Center, Leipzig University and University Hospital of Leipzig, Eilenburger Str. 15a, 04317, Leipzig, Germany. 2. Department of Clinical Pharmacy, Leipzig University, Eilenburger Str. 15a, 04317, Leipzig, Germany. 3. Department of Women and Child Health, Hospital for Children and Adolescents, University Hospital Leipzig, Liebigstr. 20a, 04103, Leipzig, Germany. 4. Center for Pediatric Research, Leipzig University, Liebigstr. 20a, 04103, Leipzig, Germany. 5. Department of General Paediatrics, Division of Child Neurology and Inherited Metabolic Diseases, Centre for Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, University Hospital Heidelberg, Im Neuenheimer Feld 430, 69120, Heidelberg, Germany. 6. Pharmacy Department of the University Hospital Leipzig, Liebigstr. 20, 04103, Leipzig, Germany. 7. Drug Safety Center, Leipzig University and University Hospital of Leipzig, Eilenburger Str. 15a, 04317, Leipzig, Germany. thilo.bertsche@medizin.uni-leipzig.de. 8. Department of Clinical Pharmacy, Leipzig University, Eilenburger Str. 15a, 04317, Leipzig, Germany. thilo.bertsche@medizin.uni-leipzig.de.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Quality of parents' performance in administering anticonvulsive rescue medication to their children suffering from seizures is unknown. After obtaining ethical approval, we used a questionnaire to ask parents of children with seizures, who had been prescribed rescue medications, about their experience in administering those. To assess the frequency of actually committed drug-handling errors, we let them administer rescue medications to dummy dolls. An expert panel rated the clinical risk of handling errors from "1" (lowest) to "6" (highest). Eighty-one parents completed the study. In the questionnaire, 85 % (100 %) of parents that already conducted rectal (buccal) administration reported that they had never experienced problems. The number of rectal administrations with at least one handling error (97 %, 58/60) was higher than in buccal administration (58 %; 14/24; p < 0.001). According to logistic regressions, previous use of rescue medication was not a predictor of the number of committed errors per process (n. s.). All errors were rated with a high clinical risk (class 4-6). CONCLUSION: By observing parents' administration of rescue medication to dummy dolls, we found a high frequency of clinically relevant drug-handling errors. Most parents, however, self-reported to have never experienced problems while administering rescue medications to their children. WHAT IS KNOWN: • For seizures with duration of more than 5 min, the administration of anticonvulsive rescue medication is recommended. • Outside the hospital, the administration of rescue medication to children is performed most frequently by their parents. What is New: • Most of the parents reported that they had never experienced problems in handling anticonvulsive rescue medication. • But in the observed drug-handling performances, identified errors committed by parents were alarmingly frequent and pose a high clinical risk according to an expert panel.
UNLABELLED: Quality of parents' performance in administering anticonvulsive rescue medication to their children suffering from seizures is unknown. After obtaining ethical approval, we used a questionnaire to ask parents of children with seizures, who had been prescribed rescue medications, about their experience in administering those. To assess the frequency of actually committed drug-handling errors, we let them administer rescue medications to dummy dolls. An expert panel rated the clinical risk of handling errors from "1" (lowest) to "6" (highest). Eighty-one parents completed the study. In the questionnaire, 85 % (100 %) of parents that already conducted rectal (buccal) administration reported that they had never experienced problems. The number of rectal administrations with at least one handling error (97 %, 58/60) was higher than in buccal administration (58 %; 14/24; p < 0.001). According to logistic regressions, previous use of rescue medication was not a predictor of the number of committed errors per process (n. s.). All errors were rated with a high clinical risk (class 4-6). CONCLUSION: By observing parents' administration of rescue medication to dummy dolls, we found a high frequency of clinically relevant drug-handling errors. Most parents, however, self-reported to have never experienced problems while administering rescue medications to their children. WHAT IS KNOWN: • For seizures with duration of more than 5 min, the administration of anticonvulsive rescue medication is recommended. • Outside the hospital, the administration of rescue medication to children is performed most frequently by their parents. What is New: • Most of the parents reported that they had never experienced problems in handling anticonvulsive rescue medication. • But in the observed drug-handling performances, identified errors committed by parents were alarmingly frequent and pose a high clinical risk according to an expert panel.
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