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Journal ArticleDOI

Computerized Physician Order Entry and Medication Errors in a Pediatric Critical Care Unit

TLDR
The implementation of CPOE resulted in almost a complete elimination of MPEs and RVs and a significant but less dramatic effect on potential ADEs.
Abstract
Objective. Medication errors are a major concern of health care professionals and medical institutions, especially errors involving children. Studies in adults have shown that computerized physician order entry (CPOE) systems reduce medication errors and adverse drug events (ADEs). The effect of CPOE implementation in a pediatric population has not been reported. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of CPOE on the frequency of errors in the medication ordering process in a pediatric critical care unit (PCCU). Methods. A prospective trial was conducted of 514 pediatric patients who were admitted to a 20-bed PCCU in a tertiary-care children’s hospital before and after implementation of CPOE. Medication errors were identified after review of all orders during the study period and then further classified as potential ADEs, medication prescribing errors (MPE), and rule violations (RV). Results. A total of 13 828 medication orders were reviewed. Before implementation, potential ADEs occurred at a rate of 2.2 per 100 orders, MPEs at a rate of 30.1 per 100 orders, and RVs at a rate of 6.8 per 100 orders. After implementation, the rate of potential ADEs was reduced to 1.3 per 100 orders, MPEs to 0.2 per 100 orders, and RVs to 0.1 per 100 orders. The overall error reduction was 95.9%. Potential ADEs were reduced by 40.9%, and MPEs and RVs were reduced by 99.4% and 97.9%, respectively. Conclusions. The implementation of CPOE resulted in almost a complete elimination of MPEs and RVs and a significant but less dramatic effect on potential ADEs.

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References
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BookDOI

To Err Is Human Building a Safer Health System

TL;DR: Boken presenterer en helhetlig strategi for hvordan myndigheter, helsepersonell, industri og forbrukere kan redusere medisinske feil.
Journal ArticleDOI

Incidence of Adverse Drug Events and Potential Adverse Drug Events: Implications for Prevention

TL;DR: Adverse drug events were common and often preventable; serious ADEs were more likely to be preventable and prevention strategies should target both stages of the drug delivery process.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of computerized physician order entry and a team intervention on prevention of serious medication errors.

TL;DR: Physician computer order entry decreased the rate of nonintercepted serious medication errors by more than half, although this decrease was larger for potential ADEs than for errors that actually resulted in an ADE.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systems Analysis of Adverse Drug Events

TL;DR: It is simply not scientifically possible to estimate current national iatrogenic injury and death rates based solely on the Harvard Medical Practice Study's (MPS) decade-old sample of patient discharge records, which included only one state during just 1 year (1984).
Journal ArticleDOI

The costs of adverse drug events in hospitalized patients

TL;DR: The substantial costs of ADEs to hospitals justify investment in efforts to prevent these events, and estimates of annual costs attributable to all ADEs and preventable ADEs for a 700-bed teaching hospital are $5.6 million and $2.8 million are conservative because they do not include the costs of injuries to patients or malpractice costs.
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