April
2005Hospital admission = medication errors
According to an article appearing in a recent issue of the Archives of
Internal Medicine, hospital admissions commonly produce medication
errors, some with the potential to be harmful. Background information
pointed out that although the admission process routinely includes a
medication use history, errors in the history may mean a failure to detect
drug‑related problems, or lead to interrupted or inappropriate drug therapy
during a patient's stay.
While previous studies had suggested these errors are a potentially serious
safety issue, the current study was designed to identify unintended
discrepancies between physicians' admission medication orders and a
comprehensive medication use history, and the potential clinical
significance of the discrepancy.
Patricia L. Cornish, BScPhm, of the University of Toronto, and colleagues
screened medical charts from three months of admissions to the general
internal medical clinics at an affiliated hospital. One hundred and
fifty‑one patients were included in the study who reported use of at least
four medications and were either able to communicate or had a caregiver who
could communicate for them.
A pharmacist or trained pharmacy or medical student visited patients after
allowing 48 hours for clarification of admission medication orders and
corrections of problems in the normal course of care. The team member
conducted a thorough history of the patient's regular medication use,
relying on a patient or caregiver interview, an inspection of prescription
vials, and follow up with a community pharmacy.
Discrepancies between physicians' admission medication orders and the
follow‑up history were divided into four types of discrepancies: a drug
omission, incorrect dose, incorrect frequency of dose, and an incorrect
drug.
These were then further judged to fall into one of three classes of
potential severity: Class one -- unlikely to cause patient discomfort or
clinical deterioration; class two -- having the potential to cause moderate
discomfort or clinical deterioration; and class three ‑ with the potential
to cause severe discomfort or clinical deterioration.
53.6% of patients had at least one unintended discrepancy.
"We identified 140 unintended discrepancies among these 81 patients," wrote
the authors. "The most common error (46.4%) was omission of a regularly used
medication. Most (61.4%) of the discrepancies were judged to have no
potential to cause serious harm. However, 38.6% of the discrepancies had the
potential to cause moderate to severe discomfort or clinical deterioration."
The authors concluded: "The data presented herein suggest that the processes
for recording medication histories on admission to the hospital are
inadequate, potentially dangerous, and in need of improvement. To improve
patient care and minimize the potential costs of preventable adverse drug
events, the health care system should explore ways to improve the accuracy
of the hospital admission medication history."
SOURCE:
Patricia L. Cornish; Sandra R. Knowles; Romina Marchesano; Vincent Tam;
Steven Shadowitz; David N. Juurlink; Edward E. Etchells: "Unintended
Medication Discrepancies at the Time of Hospital Admission," Archives of
Internal Medicine, Feb 2005; 165:424‑429.