Nuckols Teryl K, Smith-Spangler Crystal, Morton Sally C, Asch Steven M, Patel Vaspaan M, Anderson Laura J, Deichsel Emily L, Shekelle Paul G
Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, 911 Broxton Ave, Los Angeles, CA 90024, USA.
Syst Rev. 2014 Jun 4;3:56. doi: 10.1186/2046-4053-3-56.
BACKGROUND: The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act subsidizes implementation by hospitals of electronic health records with computerized provider order entry (CPOE), which may reduce patient injuries caused by medication errors (preventable adverse drug events, pADEs). Effects on pADEs have not been rigorously quantified, and effects on medication errors have been variable. The objectives of this analysis were to assess the effectiveness of CPOE at reducing pADEs in hospital-related settings, and examine reasons for heterogeneous effects on medication errors. METHODS: Articles were identified using MEDLINE, Cochrane Library, Econlit, web-based databases, and bibliographies of previous systematic reviews (September 2013). Eligible studies compared CPOE with paper-order entry in acute care hospitals, and examined diverse pADEs or medication errors. Studies on children or with limited event-detection methods were excluded. Two investigators extracted data on events and factors potentially associated with effectiveness. We used random effects models to pool data. RESULTS: Sixteen studies addressing medication errors met pooling criteria; six also addressed pADEs. Thirteen studies used pre-post designs. Compared with paper-order entry, CPOE was associated with half as many pADEs (pooled risk ratio (RR) = 0.47, 95% CI 0.31 to 0.71) and medication errors (RR = 0.46, 95% CI 0.35 to 0.60). Regarding reasons for heterogeneous effects on medication errors, five intervention factors and two contextual factors were sufficiently reported to support subgroup analyses or meta-regression. Differences between commercial versus homegrown systems, presence and sophistication of clinical decision support, hospital-wide versus limited implementation, and US versus non-US studies were not significant, nor was timing of publication. Higher baseline rates of medication errors predicted greater reductions (P < 0.001). Other context and implementation variables were seldom reported. CONCLUSIONS: In hospital-related settings, implementing CPOE is associated with a greater than 50% decline in pADEs, although the studies used weak designs. Decreases in medication errors are similar and robust to variations in important aspects of intervention design and context. This suggests that CPOE implementation, as subsidized under the HITECH Act, may benefit public health. More detailed reporting of the context and process of implementation could shed light on factors associated with greater effectiveness.
背景:《经济和临床健康的健康信息技术(HITECH)法案》为医院实施带有计算机化医嘱录入(CPOE)的电子健康记录提供补贴,这可能会减少因用药错误(可预防的药物不良事件,pADEs)导致的患者伤害。对pADEs的影响尚未得到严格量化,对用药错误的影响也各不相同。本分析的目的是评估CPOE在减少医院相关环境中pADEs方面的有效性,并探讨对用药错误产生异质性影响的原因。 方法:通过MEDLINE、Cochrane图书馆、Econlit、基于网络的数据库以及先前系统评价的参考文献(2013年9月)来识别文章。符合条件的研究在急性护理医院中将CPOE与纸质医嘱录入进行比较,并研究了各种pADEs或用药错误。排除关于儿童或事件检测方法有限的研究。两名研究人员提取了关于事件以及可能与有效性相关的因素的数据。我们使用随机效应模型来汇总数据。 结果:16项涉及用药错误的研究符合汇总标准;6项也涉及pADEs。13项研究采用前后设计。与纸质医嘱录入相比,CPOE与pADEs(汇总风险比(RR)=0.47,95%置信区间0.31至0.71)和用药错误(RR=0.46,95%置信区间0.35至0.60)的数量减半相关。关于对用药错误产生异质性影响的原因,有五个干预因素和两个背景因素有足够的报告来支持亚组分析或meta回归。商业系统与自主开发系统之间的差异、临床决策支持的存在和复杂性、全院范围实施与有限实施之间的差异以及美国与非美国研究之间的差异均不显著,发表时间也不显著。用药错误的较高基线率预示着更大的降幅(P<0.001)。很少报告其他背景和实施变量。 结论:在医院相关环境中,实施CPOE与pADEs下降超过50%相关,尽管这些研究采用的设计较弱。用药错误的减少类似,并且对干预设计和背景的重要方面的变化具有稳健性。这表明,根据HITECH法案提供补贴的CPOE实施可能有益于公共卫生。对实施背景和过程进行更详细的报告可能会揭示与更高有效性相关的因素。
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