Department of Medical Education, NHS Lanarkshire, Bothwell, Scotland, UK
Department of Psychiatry, NHS Lanarkshire, Bothwell, Scotland, UK.
BMJ Open Qual. 2020 Jun;9(2). doi: 10.1136/bmjoq-2020-000949.
Prescribing errors are a principal cause of preventable harm in healthcare. This study aims to establish a systematic approach to analysing prescribing-related adverse incident reports, in order to elucidate the characteristics and contributing factors of common prescribing errors and target multifaceted quality improvement initiatives.
All prescribing-related adverse incident reports submitted across one NHS board over 12 months were selected. Incidents involving commonly implicated drugs (involved in ≥10 incidents) underwent analysis to establish likely underlying causes using Reason's Model of Accident Causation.
330 prescribing-related adverse incident reports were identified. Commonly implicated drugs were insulin (10% of incidents), gentamicin (7%), co-amoxiclav (5%) and amoxicillin (5%). The most prevalent error types were prescribing amoxicillin when contraindicated due to allergy (5%); prescribing co-amoxiclav when contraindicated due to allergy (5%); prescribing the incorrect type of insulin (3%); and omitting to prescribe insulin (3%). Error-producing factors were identified in 86% of incidents involving commonly implicated drugs. 53% of incidents involved error-producing factors related to the working environment; 38% involved factors related to the healthcare team; and 37% involved factors related to the prescriber.
This study establishes that systematic analysis of adverse incident reports can efficiently identify the characteristics and contributing factors of common prescribing errors, in a manner useful for targeting quality improvement. Furthermore, this study produced a number of salient findings. First, a narrow range of drugs were implicated in the majority of incidents. Second, a small number of error types were highly recurrent. Lastly, a range of contributing factors were evident, with those related to the working environment contributing to the majority of prescribing errors analysed.
处方错误是医疗保健中可预防伤害的主要原因。本研究旨在建立一种系统的方法来分析与处方相关的不良事件报告,以阐明常见处方错误的特征和促成因素,并针对多方面的质量改进措施。
选择在 12 个月内在一个 NHS 委员会提交的所有与处方相关的不良事件报告。对涉及常见涉及药物(涉及≥10 起事件)的事件进行分析,以使用 Reason 的事故因果模型确定可能的根本原因。
确定了 330 份与处方相关的不良事件报告。常见涉及药物为胰岛素(占事件的 10%)、庆大霉素(7%)、复方阿莫西林(5%)和阿莫西林(5%)。最常见的错误类型是因过敏而禁忌使用阿莫西林(5%);因过敏而禁忌使用复方阿莫西林(5%);因使用错误类型的胰岛素(3%);以及漏用胰岛素(3%)。在涉及常见涉及药物的 86%的事件中确定了产生错误的因素。53%的事件涉及与工作环境相关的产生错误的因素;38%涉及与医疗团队相关的因素;37%涉及与处方者相关的因素。
本研究表明,系统地分析不良事件报告可以有效地确定常见处方错误的特征和促成因素,从而有助于有针对性地进行质量改进。此外,本研究还得出了一些重要发现。首先,大多数事件涉及的药物种类有限。其次,少数几种错误类型高度反复出现。最后,存在多种促成因素,与工作环境相关的因素导致分析的大多数处方错误。