We have located links that may give you full text access.
JOURNAL ARTICLE
MULTICENTER STUDY
OBSERVATIONAL STUDY
Strategies implementation to reduce medicine preparation error rate in neonatal intensive care units.
European Journal of Pediatrics 2016 June
UNLABELLED: This study assessed the rate of errors in intravenous medicine preparation at bedside in neonatal intensive care units versus preparation error rate in a hospital pharmacy service before and after several strategies were implemented. We performed a prospective observational study during 2013-2015. Ten Spanish neonatal intensive care units and one hospital pharmacy service participated in the study. Two types of preparation errors were considered, calculation errors and accuracy errors. The study was carried out over three consecutive phases: (1) pre-intervention phase, when medicine preparation samples were collected from neonatal intensive care units and hospital pharmacy service according to their normal clinical practice; (2) intervention phase, when protocol standardisation and educational strategy took place; and (3) post-intervention phase, when new medicine samples were collected after strategy implementation. In neonatal intensive care units, 1.35 % of samples registered calculation errors in pre-intervention phase; no calculation errors were registered in hospital pharmacy service samples. In post-intervention phase, no calculation errors were registered in either group. Accuracy error rate decreased both in neonatal intensive care units (54.7 vs 23 %) and hospital pharmacy service (38.3 vs 14.6 %).
CONCLUSION: Calculation errors can disappear with good standardisation protocols. Decrease in accuracy error depends on good preparation technique and environmental factors.
WHAT IS KNOWN: • Medication use is associated with a risk of errors and adverse events. Medication errors are more frequent and have more severe consequences in paediatric patients. • Lack of commercial drug formulations adapted to newborn infants makes medicine preparation process more prone to error. What is New: • Calculation errors are minimising using concentration standard protocols. Preparation rules are essential to ensure the accuracy process. • Environmental conditions affect the accuracy process.
CONCLUSION: Calculation errors can disappear with good standardisation protocols. Decrease in accuracy error depends on good preparation technique and environmental factors.
WHAT IS KNOWN: • Medication use is associated with a risk of errors and adverse events. Medication errors are more frequent and have more severe consequences in paediatric patients. • Lack of commercial drug formulations adapted to newborn infants makes medicine preparation process more prone to error. What is New: • Calculation errors are minimising using concentration standard protocols. Preparation rules are essential to ensure the accuracy process. • Environmental conditions affect the accuracy process.
Full text links
Related Resources
Trending Papers
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction: diagnosis, risk assessment, and treatment.Clinical Research in Cardiology : Official Journal of the German Cardiac Society 2024 April 12
Proximal versus distal diuretics in congestive heart failure.Nephrology, Dialysis, Transplantation 2024 Februrary 30
Efficacy and safety of pharmacotherapy in chronic insomnia: A review of clinical guidelines and case reports.Mental Health Clinician 2023 October
World Health Organization and International Consensus Classification of eosinophilic disorders: 2024 update on diagnosis, risk stratification, and management.American Journal of Hematology 2024 March 30
Get seemless 1-tap access through your institution/university
For the best experience, use the Read mobile app
All material on this website is protected by copyright, Copyright © 1994-2024 by WebMD LLC.
This website also contains material copyrighted by 3rd parties.
By using this service, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy.
Your Privacy Choices
You can now claim free CME credits for this literature searchClaim now
Get seemless 1-tap access through your institution/university
For the best experience, use the Read mobile app