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. 2000 Dec;83(6):492-7.
doi: 10.1136/adc.83.6.492.

Medication errors in a paediatric teaching hospital in the UK: five years operational experience

Affiliations

Medication errors in a paediatric teaching hospital in the UK: five years operational experience

L M Ross et al. Arch Dis Child. 2000 Dec.

Abstract

Background: In the past 10 years, medication errors have come to be recognised as an important cause of iatrogenic disease in hospital patients.

Aims: To determine the incidence and type of medication errors in a large UK paediatric hospital over a five year period, and to ascertain whether any error prevention programmes had influenced error occurrence.

Methods: Retrospective review of medication errors documented in standard reporting forms completed prospectively from April 1994 to August 1999. Main outcome measure was incidence of error reporting, including pre- and post-interventions.

Results: Medication errors occurred in 0.15% of admissions (195 errors; one per 662 admissions). While the highest rate occurred in neonatal intensive care (0.98%), most errors occurred in medical wards. Nurses were responsible for most reported errors (59%). Errors involving the intravenous route were commonest (56%), with antibiotics being the most frequent drug involved (44%). Fifteen (8%) involved a tenfold medication error. Although 18 (9.2%) required active patient intervention, 96% of errors were classified as minor at the time of reporting. Forty eight per cent of parents were not told an error had occurred. The introduction of a policy of double checking all drugs dispensed by pharmacy staff led to a reduction in errors from 9.8 to 6 per year. Changing the error reporting form to make it less punitive increased the error reporting rate from 32.7 to 38 per year.

Conclusion: The overall medication error rate was low. Despite this there are clear opportunities to make system changes to reduce error rates further.

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Comment in

  • Medication errors are NOT uncommon.
    Caldwell NA, Hughes DK. Caldwell NA, et al. Arch Dis Child. 2001 Aug;85(2):172. doi: 10.1136/adc.85.2.172c. Arch Dis Child. 2001. PMID: 11469281 Free PMC article. No abstract available.

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