The Impact of Technology on Prescribing Errors in Pediatric Intensive Care: A Before and After Study

被引:12
|
作者
Howlett, Moninne M. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Butler, Eileen [1 ]
Lavelle, Karen M. [1 ]
Cleary, Brian J. [2 ,4 ]
Breatnach, Cormac, V [1 ]
机构
[1] Childrens Hlth Ireland Crumlin, Dept Pharm, Dublin D12 N512, Ireland
[2] Royal Coll Surgeons Ireland, Sch Pharm, Dublin, Ireland
[3] Natl Childrens Res Ctr, Dublin, Ireland
[4] Rotunda Hosp, Dept Pharm, Parnell Sq, Dublin, Ireland
来源
APPLIED CLINICAL INFORMATICS | 2020年 / 11卷 / 02期
关键词
clinical information systems; intensive and critical care; pediatrics; computer-assisted decision-making; medical order entry systems; prescriptions; medication errors; infusion pumps; COMPUTERIZED ORDER ENTRY; MEDICATION ERRORS; PRESCRIPTION ERRORS; SAFETY; INTERVENTIONS; PREVALENCE; SYSTEMS;
D O I
10.1055/s-0040-1709508
中图分类号
R-058 [];
学科分类号
摘要
Background Increased use of health information technology (HIT) has been advocated as a medication error reduction strategy. Evidence of its benefits in the pediatric setting remains limited. In 2012, electronic prescribing (ICCA, Philips, United Kingdom) and standard concentration infusions (SCIs)-facilitated by smart-pump technology-were introduced into the pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) of an Irish tertiary-care pediatric hospital. Objective The aim of this study is to assess the impact of the new technology on the rate and severity of PICU prescribing errors and identify technology-generated errors. Methods A retrospective, before and after study design, was employed. Medication orders were reviewed over 24 weeks distributed across four time periods: preimplementation (Epoch 1); postimplementation of SCIs (Epoch 2); immediate postimplementation of electronic prescribing (Epoch 3); and 1 year postimplementation (Epoch 4). Only orders reviewed by a clinical pharmacist were included. Prespecified definitions, multidisciplinary consensus and validated grading methods were utilized. Results A total of 3,356 medication orders for 288 patients were included. Overall error rates were similar in Epoch 1 and 4 (10.2 vs. 9.8%; p = 0.8), but error types differed ( p < 0.001). Incomplete and wrong unit errors were eradicated; duplicate orders increased. Dosing errors remained most common. A total of 27% of postimplementation errors were technology-generated. Implementation of SCIs alone was associated with significant reductions in infusion-related prescribing errors (29.0% [Epoch 1] to 14.6% [Epoch 2]; p < 0.001). Further reductions (8.4% [Epoch 4]) were identified after implementation of electronically generated infusion orders. Non-infusion error severity was unchanged ( p = 0.13); fewer infusion errors reached the patient ( p < 0.01). No errors causing harm were identified. Conclusion The limitations of electronic prescribing in reducing overall prescribing errors in PICU have been demonstrated. The replacement of weight-based infusions with SCIs was associated with significant reductions in infusion prescribing errors. Technology-generated errors were common, highlighting the need for on-going research on HIT implementation in pediatric settings.
引用
收藏
页码:323 / 335
页数:13
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