Kiechle Eric S, McKenna Colleen M, Carter Hannah, Zeymo Alexander, Gelfand Bradley W, DeGeorge Lindsey M, Sauter Diane A, Mazer-Amirshahi Maryann
Department of Emergency Medicine, MedStar Washington Hospital Center, 110 Irving Street NW, Suite NA 1009, Washington, DC, 20010, USA.
Georgetown University School of Medicine, 3900 Reservoir Road NW, Washington, DC, 20007, USA.
J Med Toxicol. 2018 Dec;14(4):272-277. doi: 10.1007/s13181-018-0671-7. Epub 2018 Jul 2.
Medication histories, including knowledge of allergies and adverse drug reactions (ADRs), are a nationally recognized quality measure. Medication histories in the emergency department (ED) are often inaccurate or incomplete. Our objective was to determine the prevalence and nature of medication allergy and ADR discrepancies in an urban ED.
This was a prospective observational descriptive study, enrolling a convenience sample of adults over 7 months at a single academic urban ED. Trained personnel recorded patient demographics and number of daily medications. Patients listed any prior drug allergies or non-allergic ADRs. Following the ED encounter, the patients' self-reported allergies and ADRs were compared to the electronic medical record (EMR) to identify and describe discrepancies.
A sample of 1014 patients, predominantly black (81%), female (60%), and in the 18- to 59-year-old range (69%), was recruited. Most patients were taking at least one daily medication (74%). Three hundred fifteen patients reported at least one allergy (31%), and 252 (25%) at least one ADR. Four hundred sixteen patients (41%) had a discrepancy between their self-report of allergy or ADR and the EMR. Omissions were the most frequent discrepancy. Full descriptions of allergies or ADR were present in 18.4% of charts. Fifty-seven patients (5.6%) were administered a medication which could have interacted with a documented allergy or ADR; none of the allergy EMR records were updated to reflected this.
In this cross-sectional ED study, drug allergies and ADRs were both highly prevalent. There were significant discrepancies in documentation of allergies and ADRs between patient self-report and the EMR.
用药史,包括过敏史和药物不良反应(ADR)信息,是一项全国公认的质量指标。急诊科(ED)的用药史往往不准确或不完整。我们的目的是确定城市急诊科中药物过敏和ADR差异的发生率及性质。
这是一项前瞻性观察性描述性研究,在一个学术性城市急诊科对成年人进行了为期7个月的便利抽样。经过培训的人员记录了患者的人口统计学信息和每日用药数量。患者列出任何既往药物过敏或非过敏性ADR。在急诊科就诊后,将患者自我报告的过敏和ADR与电子病历(EMR)进行比较,以识别和描述差异。
招募了1014名患者,主要为黑人(81%)、女性(60%),年龄在18至59岁之间(69%)。大多数患者至少服用一种每日药物(74%)。315名患者报告至少一种过敏(31%),252名(25%)报告至少一种ADR。416名患者(41%)在过敏或ADR的自我报告与EMR之间存在差异。遗漏是最常见的差异。18.4%的病历中有过敏或ADR的完整描述。57名患者(5.6%)接受了可能与记录的过敏或ADR相互作用的药物治疗;没有一份过敏EMR记录更新以反映这一情况。
在这项横断面急诊科研究中,药物过敏和ADR都非常普遍。患者自我报告与EMR之间在过敏和ADR记录方面存在显著差异。