Rosa Mário Borges, Perini Edson, Anacleto Tânia Azevedo, Neiva Hessem Miranda, Bogutchi Tânia
Fundação Hospitalar do Estado de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, MG, Brasil.
Rev Saude Publica. 2009 Jun;43(3):490-8. Epub 2009 Apr 17.
Medication errors are currently a worldwide public health issue and it is one of the most serious prescription errors. The objective of the study was to evaluate the practice of prescribing high-alert medications and its association with the prevalence of medication errors in hospital settings.
A retrospective cross-sectional study was conducted including 4,026 prescription order forms of high-alert medications. There were evaluated all prescriptions received at the pharmacy of a reference hospital in the state of Minas Gerais, southeastern Brazil, over a 30-day period in 2001. Prescription were checked for legibility, patient name, type of prescription, date, handwriting or writing, prescriber identification, drug prescribed, and use of abbreviations. Prescription errors were classified as writing or decision errors and how the type of prescription affected the occurrence of errors was assessed.
Most prescriptions were handwritten (45.7%). In 47.0% of handwritten, mixed and pre-typed prescriptions had patient name errors; the prescriber name was difficult to identify in 33.7%; 19.3% of them were hardly legible or illegible. Of a total of 7,148 high-alert drugs prescribed, 3,177 errors were found, and the most frequent one was missing information (86.5%). Errors occurred mostly in prescriptions of heparin, phentanyl, and midazolam. Intensive care and neurology units had the highest number of errors per prescription. Non-standard abbreviations were frequent and widespread. Overall it was estimated 3.3 errors per prescription order form. Pre-typed prescriptions were less likely to have errors compared to mixed or handwritten prescriptions.
The study results show there is a need for standardizing the prescription process and eliminating handwritten prescriptions. The use of pre-typed or edited prescriptions may reduce errors associated to high-alert medications.
用药错误目前是一个全球性的公共卫生问题,是最严重的处方错误之一。本研究的目的是评估高警示药品的处方开具情况及其与医院环境中用药错误发生率的关联。
进行了一项回顾性横断面研究,纳入4026份高警示药品处方单。对巴西东南部米纳斯吉拉斯州一家参考医院药房在2001年30天内收到的所有处方进行评估。检查处方的可读性、患者姓名、处方类型、日期、书写或字迹、开处方者身份识别、所开药物以及缩写的使用情况。将处方错误分类为书写错误或决策错误,并评估处方类型如何影响错误的发生。
大多数处方是手写的(45.7%)。在47.0%的手写、混合和预打印处方中存在患者姓名错误;33.7%的处方难以识别开处方者姓名;19.3%的处方几乎难以辨认或无法辨认。在总共开出的7148种高警示药物中,发现3177处错误,最常见的是信息缺失(86.5%)。错误大多发生在肝素、芬太尼和咪达唑仑的处方中。重症监护病房和神经科病房每张处方的错误数量最多。非标准缩写频繁且普遍。总体估计每张处方单有3.3处错误。与混合或手写处方相比,预打印处方出现错误的可能性较小。
研究结果表明,需要规范处方流程并消除手写处方。使用预打印或编辑后的处方可能会减少与高警示药品相关的错误。