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Comparative Study
. 2005 Aug 1;183(3):129-33.

Pethidine in emergency departments: promoting evidence-based prescribing

Affiliations
  • PMID: 16053414
Comparative Study

Pethidine in emergency departments: promoting evidence-based prescribing

Karen I Kaye et al. Med J Aust. .

Abstract

Objective: To reduce pethidine prescribing in hospital emergency departments (EDs).

Design: Multi-centre drug use evaluation (DUE) process.

Setting and participants: Emergency departments in 23 public hospitals (22 in New South Wales, 1 in Victoria) from 1 September 2002 to 31 August 2003. Participating hospitals included seven principal referral hospitals, six major non-teaching hospitals and 10 district or community hospitals. Data for comparison were collected from 12 non-participating hospitals.

Interventions: Hospital coordinators at each participating hospital were provided with support to implement a range of prescribing interventions in their ED in each of three DUE cycles. Interventions included educational materials (guidelines, posters, prescribing reminders), audit and feedback, and small-group discussions. Three audits of pethidine prescribing were undertaken. Prescribing was compared with evidence-based guidelines and non-concordance identified.

Main outcome measures: Number of dosage units of parenteral analgesics issued to the ED from each hospital's pharmacy department was recorded monthly and aggregated in 3-month periods.

Results: In the 12 months between the preintervention period and the equivalent post-intervention period, pethidine use decreased by 62% in project hospitals (4669 to 1793 units) and 56% in control hospitals (1476 to 648 units). Six months after project completion there was a significantly greater reduction from baseline in participating hospitals (71%; 4669 to 1348 units) compared with non-participating hospitals (64%; 1476 to 532 units; P < 0.001). There was a concurrent increase in use of both morphine and tramadol.

Conclusion: There was a sustained reduction in pethidine use during the study period, which may indicate successful promotion of safer analgesic prescribing. It is not clear whether changes were a result of collaborative DUE methods or other factors.

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