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Adverse drug events caused by serious medication administration errors.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Kale, A; Keohane, CA; Maviglia, S; Gandhi, TK; Poon, EG
Published in: BMJ quality & safety
November 2012

To determine how often serious or life-threatening medication administration errors with the potential to cause harm (potential adverse drug events) result in actual harm (adverse drug events (ADEs)) in the hospital setting.Retrospective chart review of clinical events following observed medication administration errors.Medication errors are common at the medication administration stage for inpatients. While many errors can cause harm, it is unclear exactly how often.In a previous study where 14 041 medication administrations were directly observed, 1271 medication administration errors were discovered, of which 133 had the potential to cause serious or life-threatening harm and were considered serious or life-threatening potential adverse drug events. As a follow-up, clinical reviewers conducted detailed chart review of serious or life-threatening potential ADEs to determine if they caused an ADE. Reviewers assessed severity of the ADE and attribution to the error.Ten (7.5% (95% CI 6.98 to 8.01)) actual ADEs resulted from the 133 serious and life-threatening potential ADEs, of which 6 resulted in significant, three in serious, and one life threatening injury. Therefore 4 (3% (95% CI 2.12 to 3.6)) of serious or life threatening potential ADEs led to serious or life threatening ADEs. Half of the ADEs were caused by dosage or monitoring errors for anti-hypertensives.Unintercepted potential ADEs at the medication administration stage can cause serious patient harm. At hospitals where 6 million doses are administered per year, about 4000 preventable ADEs would be attributable to medication administration errors annually.

Duke Scholars

Published In

BMJ quality & safety

DOI

EISSN

2044-5423

ISSN

2044-5415

Publication Date

November 2012

Volume

21

Issue

11

Start / End Page

933 / 938

Related Subject Headings

  • Risk Management
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Medication Errors
  • Humans
  • Drug Administration Schedule
  • Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems
  • 4206 Public health
  • 4203 Health services and systems
 

Citation

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MLA
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Kale, A., Keohane, C. A., Maviglia, S., Gandhi, T. K., & Poon, E. G. (2012). Adverse drug events caused by serious medication administration errors. BMJ Quality & Safety, 21(11), 933–938. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjqs-2012-000946
Kale, Abhivyakti, Carol A. Keohane, Saverio Maviglia, Tejal K. Gandhi, and Eric G. Poon. “Adverse drug events caused by serious medication administration errors.BMJ Quality & Safety 21, no. 11 (November 2012): 933–38. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjqs-2012-000946.
Kale A, Keohane CA, Maviglia S, Gandhi TK, Poon EG. Adverse drug events caused by serious medication administration errors. BMJ quality & safety. 2012 Nov;21(11):933–8.
Kale, Abhivyakti, et al. “Adverse drug events caused by serious medication administration errors.BMJ Quality & Safety, vol. 21, no. 11, Nov. 2012, pp. 933–38. Epmc, doi:10.1136/bmjqs-2012-000946.
Kale A, Keohane CA, Maviglia S, Gandhi TK, Poon EG. Adverse drug events caused by serious medication administration errors. BMJ quality & safety. 2012 Nov;21(11):933–938.

Published In

BMJ quality & safety

DOI

EISSN

2044-5423

ISSN

2044-5415

Publication Date

November 2012

Volume

21

Issue

11

Start / End Page

933 / 938

Related Subject Headings

  • Risk Management
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Medication Errors
  • Humans
  • Drug Administration Schedule
  • Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems
  • 4206 Public health
  • 4203 Health services and systems