Stockton Kaitlin R, Wickham Maeve E, Lai Simon, Badke Katherin, Dahri Karen, Villanyi Diane, Ho Vi, Hohl Corinne M
Affiliations: Departments of Family Medicine (Stockton) and Emergency Medicine (Wickham, Hohl), Faculty of Medicine (Lai), University of British Columbia; Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences (Badke, Dahri), Vancouver General Hospital; Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences (Dahri), University of British Columbia; Department of Internal Medicine (Villanyi) and Emergency Department (Ho, Hohl), Vancouver General Hospital, Vancouver, BC.
CMAJ Open. 2017 May 5;5(2):E345-E353. doi: 10.9778/cmajo.20170023.
To reduce medication discrepancies (unintended differences between a patient's outpatient and inpatient medication regimens), Canadian institutions have implemented medication reconciliation forms that are prepopulated with outpatient medication dispensing data. These may prompt prescribers to reorder discontinued medications or continue newly contraindicated medications. Our objective was to evaluate the incidence of medication discrepancies and errors of commission after the implementation of such forms.
This retrospective chart review included patients previously enrolled in an observational study in which a research pharmacist prospectively collected best-possible medication histories in the emergency department. Research assistants uninvolved with the parent study compared medication orders written in the first 48 hours after admission with the research pharmacist's best-possible medication history to identify medication discrepancies and errors of commission, defined as inappropriate medication continuations and reordering of previously stopped medications. An independent panel adjudicated the clinical significance of the errors.
Of 151 patients, 71 (47.0% [95% confidence interval (CI) 39.2-54.9]) were exposed to 112 medication errors on admission. Of the 112 errors, 24 (21.4% [95% CI 14.9-29.9]) were clinically significant. Errors of commission accounted for 24.1% (27/112 [95% CI 17.3-32.8]) of all errors; 10 (37.0% [95% CI 18.8-55.2]) of the errors of commission were clinically significant.
Medication errors were common after the implementation of electronically prepopulated medication reconciliation forms. Prospective research is required to examine the impact of prepopulated medication reconciliation forms and ensure they do not facilitate errors of commission.
为减少用药差异(患者门诊和住院用药方案之间的意外差异),加拿大各机构已实施用药核对表,这些表格预先填写了门诊用药配药数据。这可能会促使开处方者重新开出已停用的药物或继续使用新出现禁忌的药物。我们的目的是评估实施此类表格后用药差异和用药失误的发生率。
这项回顾性图表审查纳入了之前参与一项观察性研究的患者,在该研究中,一名研究药剂师在急诊科前瞻性收集了尽可能完整的用药史。未参与母研究的研究助理将入院后48小时内开具的用药医嘱与研究药剂师尽可能完整的用药史进行比较,以识别用药差异和用药失误,用药失误定义为不适当的药物延续和重新开出之前已停用的药物。一个独立小组对这些失误的临床意义进行了判定。
在151名患者中,71名(47.0%[95%置信区间(CI)39.2 - 54.9])在入院时出现了112次用药失误。在这112次失误中,24次(21.4%[95%CI 14.9 - 29.9])具有临床意义。用药失误占所有失误的24.1%(27/112[95%CI 17.3 - 32.8]);其中10次(37.0%[95%CI 18.8 - 55.2])用药失误具有临床意义。
实施电子预填充用药核对表后用药失误很常见。需要进行前瞻性研究,以检查预填充用药核对表的影响,并确保它们不会助长用药失误。