Department of Pharmacy, Birmingham Children's Hospital, Birmingham, England.
Paediatr Drugs. 2010 Oct 1;12(5):331-7. doi: 10.2165/11316230-000000000-00000.
In December 2007, the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence and the National Patient Safety Agency in the UK (NICE-NPSA) published guidance that recommends all adults admitted to hospital receive medication reconciliation, usually by pharmacy staff. A costing and report tool was provided indicating a resource requirement of 12.9 million pounds for England per year. Pediatric patients are excluded from this guidance.
To determine the clinical significance of medication reconciliation in children on admission to hospital.
A prospective observational study included pediatric patients admitted to a neurosurgical ward at Birmingham Children's Hospital, Birmingham, England, between September 2006 and March 2007. Medication reconciliation was conducted by a pharmacist after the admission of each of 100 consecutive eligible patients aged 4 months to 16 years. The clinical significance of prescribing disparities between pre-admission medications and initial admission medication orders was determined by an expert multidisciplinary panel and quantified using an analog scale. The main outcome measure was the clinical significance of unintentional variations between hospital admission medication orders and physician-prescribed pre-admission medication for repeat (continuing) medications.
Initial admission medication orders for children differed from prescribed pre-admission medication in 39% of cases. Half of all resulting prescribing variations in this setting had the potential to cause moderate or severe discomfort or clinical deterioration. These results mirror findings for adults.
The introduction of medication reconciliation in children on admission to hospital has the potential to reduce discomfort or clinical deterioration by reducing unintentional changes to repeat prescribed medication. Consequently, there is no justification for the omission of children from the NICE-NPSA guidance concerning medication reconciliation in hospitals, and costing tools should include pediatric patients.
2007 年 12 月,英国国家卫生与临床优化研究所和国家患者安全局(NICE-NPSA)发布了一项指南,建议所有住院成人患者接受药物重整,通常由药剂师负责。该指南提供了一份成本核算和报告工具,表明英格兰每年需要 1290 万英镑的资源。该指南不包括儿科患者。
确定药物重整在儿童入院时的临床意义。
一项前瞻性观察性研究纳入了 2006 年 9 月至 2007 年 3 月期间在英国伯明翰儿童医院神经外科病房收治的 100 例连续合格的 4 个月至 16 岁儿童患者。在每个患者入院后,由药剂师进行药物重整。由一个多学科专家小组确定入院时医嘱与入院前医嘱之间的用药差异的临床意义,并使用模拟量表进行量化。主要观察指标为入院时医嘱与医师为重复(持续)用药开具的入院前医嘱之间的非预期差异的临床意义。
儿童入院时医嘱与入院前医嘱不符的比例为 39%。在这种情况下,所有处方差异中有一半可能导致中度或重度不适或临床恶化。这些结果与成人的研究结果一致。
在儿童入院时实施药物重整有可能通过减少重复开具药物的非预期变化,减少不适或临床恶化。因此,将儿童排除在 NICE-NPSA 关于医院药物重整的指南之外是没有道理的,成本核算工具应包括儿科患者。