Walsh Kathleen E, Adams William G, Bauchner Howard, Vinci Robert J, Chessare John B, Cooper Maureen R, Hebert Pamela M, Schainker Elisabeth G, Landrigan Christopher P
Department of Pediatrics, University of Massachusetts Medical School/University of Massachusetts Memorial Medical Center, 55 North Lake St, Worcester, MA 01655, USA.
Pediatrics. 2006 Nov;118(5):1872-9. doi: 10.1542/peds.2006-0810.
The objective of this study was to determine the frequency and types of pediatric medication errors attributable to design features of a computerized order entry system.
A total of 352 randomly selected, inpatient, pediatric admissions were reviewed retrospectively for identification of medication errors, 3 to 12 months after implementation of computerized order entry. Errors were identified and classified by using an established, comprehensive, active surveillance method. Errors attributable to the computer system were classified according to type.
Among 6916 medication orders in 1930 patient-days, there were 104 pediatric medication errors, of which 71 were serious (37 serious medication errors per 1000 patient-days). Of all pediatric medication errors detected, 19% (7 serious and 13 with little potential for harm) were computer related. The rate of computer-related pediatric errors was 10 errors per 1000 patient-days, and the rate of serious computer-related pediatric errors was 3.6 errors per 1000 patient-days. The following 4 types of computer-related errors were identified: duplicate medication orders (same medication ordered twice in different concentrations of syrup, to work around computer constraints; 2 errors), drop-down menu selection errors (wrong selection from a drop-down box; 9 errors), keypad entry error (5 typed instead of 50; 1 error), and order set errors (orders selected from a pediatric order set that were not appropriate for the patient; 8 errors). In addition, 4 preventable adverse drug events in drug ordering occurred that were not considered computer-related but were not prevented by the computerized physician order entry system.
Serious pediatric computer-related errors are uncommon (3.6 errors per 1000 patient-days), but computer systems can introduce some new pediatric medication errors that are not typically seen in a paper ordering system.
本研究的目的是确定可归因于计算机化医嘱录入系统设计特点的儿科用药错误的频率和类型。
对352例随机选取的儿科住院患者进行回顾性审查,以识别在计算机化医嘱录入实施3至12个月后出现的用药错误。通过使用既定的、全面的主动监测方法来识别和分类错误。将归因于计算机系统的错误按类型进行分类。
在1930个患者日的6916条用药医嘱中,有104例儿科用药错误,其中71例为严重错误(每1000患者日有37例严重用药错误)。在所有检测到的儿科用药错误中,19%(7例严重错误和13例危害可能性较小的错误)与计算机相关。与计算机相关的儿科错误发生率为每1000患者日10例,严重的与计算机相关的儿科错误发生率为每1000患者日3.6例。识别出以下4种与计算机相关的错误类型:重复用药医嘱(为绕过计算机限制,以不同糖浆浓度两次开出相同药物;2例错误)、下拉菜单选择错误(从下拉框中选错;9例错误)、小键盘输入错误(输入5而不是50;1例错误)和医嘱集错误(从儿科医嘱集中选择的医嘱不适用于该患者;8例错误)。此外,在药物医嘱中发生了4起可预防的药物不良事件,这些事件不被认为与计算机相关,但未被计算机化医师医嘱录入系统预防。
严重的与计算机相关的儿科错误并不常见(每1000患者日3.6例),但计算机系统可能会引入一些在纸质医嘱系统中通常不会出现的新的儿科用药错误。