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The Role of Bar Coding and Smart Pumps in Safety
Jeffrey M. Rothschild, MD, MPH; Carol Keohane, RN, BSN AHRQ WebM&M [serial online]. September 2008.
Medication safety in hospitals depends on the successful execution of a complex system of scores of individual tasks that can be categorized into five stages: ordering or prescribing, preparing, dispensing, transcribing, and monitoring the patient's response. Many of these tasks lend themselves to technologic tools. Over the past 20 years, technology has played an increasingly larger role toward achieving the five rights of medication safety: getting the right dose of the right drug to the right patient using the right route and at the right time. While several of these technologies may incur significant upfront and maintenance costs, the net impact over time may be reduced overall institutional costs and improvements in work efficiency. Examples of technologic tools commonly seen in many hospitals today include computerized provider order entry (CPOE) with decision support and automatic dispensing carts, also known as medication dispensing robots. While outside the scope of this Perspective, it is important to emphasize that many nontechnologic interventions, such as clinical pharmacists on physician rounds, can be equally effective in improving medication safety.
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Resource Type
Commentary
Setting of Care
Hospitals
Target Audience
Health Care Providers
Health Care Executives and Administrators
Information Professionals
Clinical Area
Gynecology
Hospital Pharmacy
Safety Target
Infusion Pumps
Medication Errors/Preventable Adverse Drug Events
Anticoagulants
Approach to Improving Safety
Medical Device Design
Medical Alarm Design
Automatic drug dispensers
Bar Coding and Radiofrequency ID Tagging
Computerized Adverse Event Detection
Clinical Information Systems