Article
Medication errors in a paediatric teaching hospital in the UK:
five years operational experience
L M Rossa, J Wallaceb, J Y Patona
a Department of Child
Health, University of Glasgow, Royal Hospital for Sick Children,
Yorkhill NHS Trust, Glasgow G3 8SJ, UK, b Pharmacy Department, Royal Hospital for
Sick Children
Correspondence to: Dr Ross LINDAROSS{at}cqm.co.uk
Accepted 13 July 2000
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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Key messages
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Keywords: children; medication errors
© 2000 by Archives of Disease in Childhood
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