Rinke Michael L, Bundy David G, Velasquez Christina A, Rao Sandesh, Zerhouni Yasmin, Lobner Katie, Blanck Jaime F, Miller Marlene R
Department of Pediatrics, Children's Hospital at Montefiore, Bronx, New York;
Department of Pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, South Carolina;
Pediatrics. 2014 Aug;134(2):338-60. doi: 10.1542/peds.2013-3531. Epub 2014 Jul 14.
Medication errors cause appreciable morbidity and mortality in children. The objective was to determine the effectiveness of interventions to reduce pediatric medication errors, identify gaps in the literature, and perform meta-analyses on comparable studies.
Relevant studies were identified from searches of PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, the Cochrane Library, and the Cumulative Index to Nursing Allied Health Literature and previous systematic reviews. Inclusion criteria were peer-reviewed original data in any language testing an intervention to reduce medication errors in children. Abstract and full-text article review were conducted by 2 independent authors with sequential data extraction.
A total of 274 full-text articles were reviewed and 63 were included. Only 1% of studies were conducted at community hospitals, 11% were conducted in ambulatory populations, 10% reported preventable adverse drug events, 10% examined administering errors, 3% examined dispensing errors, and none reported cost-effectiveness data, suggesting persistent research gaps. Variation existed in the methods, definitions, outcomes, and rate denominators for all studies; and many showed an appreciable risk of bias. Although 26 studies (41%) involved computerized provider order entry, a meta-analysis was not performed because of methodologic heterogeneity. Studies of computerized provider order entry with clinical decision support compared with studies without clinical decision support reported a 36% to 87% reduction in prescribing errors; studies of preprinted order sheets revealed a 27% to 82% reduction in prescribing errors.
Pediatric medication errors can be reduced, although our understanding of optimal interventions remains hampered. Research should focus on understudied areas, use standardized definitions and outcomes, and evaluate cost-effectiveness.
用药错误导致儿童出现明显的发病率和死亡率。目的是确定减少儿科用药错误干预措施的有效性,找出文献中的空白,并对可比研究进行荟萃分析。
通过检索PubMed、Embase、Scopus、Web of Science、Cochrane图书馆以及护理与联合健康文献累积索引和以往的系统评价来确定相关研究。纳入标准为以任何语言发表的经同行评审的原始数据,测试减少儿童用药错误的干预措施。由2名独立作者进行摘要和全文文章评审,并进行序贯数据提取。
共评审了274篇全文文章,纳入63篇。只有1%的研究在社区医院进行,11%在门诊人群中进行,10%报告了可预防的药物不良事件,10%检查了给药错误,3%检查了调配错误,且无一报告成本效益数据,这表明研究存在持续的空白。所有研究在方法、定义、结果和率分母方面存在差异;许多研究显示出明显的偏倚风险。尽管26项研究(41%)涉及计算机化医嘱录入,但由于方法学异质性未进行荟萃分析。与无临床决策支持的计算机化医嘱录入研究相比,有临床决策支持的研究报告处方错误减少了36%至87%;预印医嘱单研究显示处方错误减少了27%至82%。
儿科用药错误可以减少,尽管我们对最佳干预措施的理解仍然受到阻碍。研究应侧重于研究不足的领域,使用标准化的定义和结果,并评估成本效益。