Sard Brian E, Walsh Kathleen E, Doros Gheorghe, Hannon Megan, Moschetti Wayne, Bauchner Howard
Departments of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine and Boston Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Pediatrics. 2008 Oct;122(4):782-7. doi: 10.1542/peds.2007-3064.
The goal was to determine the impact on medication prescribing errors of adding a pediatric medication list (quicklist) to a computerized physician order entry system in a pediatric emergency department.
The quicklist is a drug dosing support tool that targets the most common medications in our clinical setting. We performed a retrospective comparison of orders from 420 randomly selected visits before and after quicklist introduction. Error rates were analyzed with respect to urgency level, physician training level, and patient age. The quicklist was examined for frequency of use and error rates.
The 840 patient visits (420 before intervention and 420 after intervention) generated 724 medication orders, which contained 156 medication prescribing errors (21%). The groups did not differ with respect to urgency level, physician training level, or patient age. There were significant decreases in the rate of errors per 100 visits, from 24 to 13 errors per 100 visits, and in the rate of errors per 100 orders, from 31 to 14 errors per 100 orders. The decrease in the error rates did not vary according to urgency score, age group, or physician training level. The quicklist was used in 30% of the orders in the postintervention group. In this group, the error rate was 1.9 errors per 100 orders when the quicklist was used, compared with 18.3 errors per 100 orders when the list was not used. Errors of wrong formulation, allergy, drug-drug interaction, and rule violations were eliminated.
The introduction of the quicklist was followed by a significant reduction in medication prescribing errors. A list with dosing support for commonly used pediatric medications may help adapt computerized physician order entry systems designed for adults to serve pediatric populations more effectively.
确定在儿科急诊科的计算机化医生医嘱录入系统中添加儿科用药清单(快速清单)对用药处方错误的影响。
快速清单是一种药物剂量支持工具,针对我们临床环境中最常用的药物。我们对快速清单引入前后随机选择的420次就诊的医嘱进行了回顾性比较。分析了错误率与紧急程度、医生培训水平和患者年龄的关系。对快速清单的使用频率和错误率进行了检查。
840次患者就诊(干预前420次,干预后420次)产生了724条用药医嘱,其中包含156条用药处方错误(21%)。两组在紧急程度、医生培训水平或患者年龄方面没有差异。每100次就诊的错误率从24次显著降至13次,每100条医嘱的错误率从31次降至14次。错误率的降低并不因紧急程度评分、年龄组或医生培训水平而异。干预后组中30%的医嘱使用了快速清单。在该组中,使用快速清单时每100条医嘱的错误率为1.9次,而未使用清单时为每100条医嘱18.3次。剂型错误、过敏、药物相互作用和违规错误均被消除。
引入快速清单后,用药处方错误显著减少。一份为常用儿科药物提供剂量支持的清单可能有助于使专为成人设计的计算机化医生医嘱录入系统更有效地服务于儿科人群。