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Approach to Improving Safety
- Communication Improvement 31
- Culture of Safety 2
- Education and Training 23
- Error Reporting and Analysis 32
- Human Factors Engineering 25
- Legal and Policy Approaches 5
- Logistical Approaches 6
- Quality Improvement Strategies 28
- Specialization of Care 15
- Teamwork 6
- Technologic Approaches 79
Safety Target
- Alert fatigue 4
- Device-related Complications 1
- Diagnostic Errors 3
- Discontinuities, Gaps, and Hand-Off Problems 12
- Drug shortages 2
- Fatigue and Sleep Deprivation 1
- Interruptions and distractions 3
- Medical Complications 4
- Medication Safety
- Nonsurgical Procedural Complications 2
- Psychological and Social Complications 1
- Surgical Complications 4
Setting of Care
Clinical Area
- Dentistry 1
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Medicine
107
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Internal Medicine
51
- Geriatrics 11
- Pediatrics 29
- Primary Care 13
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Internal Medicine
51
- Nursing 10
- Pharmacy 54
Target Audience
Search results for "Active Errors"
- Active Errors
- Ordering/Prescribing Errors
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Special or Theme Issue
Special Issue: Patient Safety.
Ergonomics. 2006;49:439-630.
The 13 articles in this special issue cover topics on the role of ergonomics in patient safety.
Journal Article > Study
Prescription errors related to the use of computerized provider order-entry system for pediatric patients.
Alhanout K, Bun SS, Retornaz K, Chiche L, Colombini N. Int J Med Inform. 2017;103:15-19.
Computerized provider order entry has been shown to decrease adverse drug events, but it can also introduce new medication errors. This retrospective study examined medication ordering errors intercepted by pharmacists for pediatric patients. As with prior studies in pediatrics, this investigation uncovered dosing errors associated with weight-based dosing, including calculation errors and missing weight information. The most common medication associated with errors was acetaminophen, which can cause severe harm if incorrectly dosed. The authors call for improving electronic health record prescribing interfaces, better user training, and enhancing communication among providers to prevent medication errors.
Journal Article > Commentary
Elimination of emergency department medication errors due to estimated weights.
Greenwalt M, Griffen D, Wilkerson J. BMJ Qual Improv Rep. 2017;6:u214416.w5476.
Inaccurate assessments of patient weight can lead to medication dosing errors. This commentary describes how a single-center quality improvement project drew from errors in the emergency department associated with incorrect patient weight estimates and applied storytelling, Lean Six Sigma, and Fishbone diagram approaches to develop and test a method of entering weights that eliminated these errors during the 6-month intervention period.
Journal Article > Commentary
Responsible e-prescribing needs e-discontinuation.
Fischer S, Rose A. JAMA. 2017;317:469-470.
E-prescribing is a key strategy to improve medication safety by addressing illegible prescriptions, order omissions, and dosage confusion. However, there have been unintended consequences such as the inability to discontinue medications ordered electronically. This commentary reviews problems associated with this unintended consequence and suggests that enabling electronic cancellation of prescriptions can help address the issue. A WebM&M commentary discussed a case involving an electronic prescribing error.
Journal Article > Study
E-prescribing and adverse drug events: an observational study of the Medicare Part D population with diabetes.
Gabriel MH, Powers C, Encinosa W, Bynum JP. Med Care. 2017;55:456-462.
Hypoglycemia is a common and severe adverse drug event among patients with diabetes. This retrospective study of claims data found that Medicare patients with diabetes were less likely to be hospitalized or seen in the emergency department for hypoglycemia if their medications were prescribed electronically, compared to those receiving fewer or no electronic prescriptions. These findings add to the literature demonstrating the benefits of electronic prescribing.
Cases & Commentaries
Hazards of Loading Doses
- Web M&M
Jeffrey J. Mucksavage, PharmD, and Eljim P. Tesoro, PharmD; January 2017
An emergency department physician ordered a loading dose of IV phenytoin for a woman with a history of seizures and cardiac arrest. However, he failed to order that the loading dose be switched back to an appropriate (and lower) maintenance dose, and 3 days later the patient developed somnolence, severe ataxia, and dysarthria. Her serum phenytoin level was 3 times the maximum therapeutic level.
Journal Article > Study
Mandatory provider review and pain clinic laws reduce the amounts of opioids prescribed and overdose death rates.
Dowell D, Zhang K, Noonan RK, Hockenberry JM. Health Aff (Millwood). 2016;35:1876-1883.
Opioid-related harm, including overdose deaths, has reached epidemic proportions. This study used a difference-in-differences analysis to examine whether a policy approach could reduce harm from opioid misuse. Investigators compared states with and without mandated provider review of drug monitoring data. In states with mandated review, opioid prescribers must check whether patients are receiving opioids from multiple prescribers and identify the total prescribed opioid dose. States with mandated review policies had fewer opioid overdose deaths and lower amounts of opioids prescribed than states without mandated prescriber review. These results are consistent with a prior study that established the benefit of prescription drug monitoring programs. The authors assert that despite the effectiveness of this policy, more interventions are needed to enhance opioid safety, as suggested in a recent study. A previous WebM&M commentary described opioid-related harm.
Newspaper/Magazine Article
Prescribing errors that cause harm.
Rider BB, Gaunt MJ, Grissinger M. PA-PSRS Patient Saf Advis. September 2016;13:81-91.
Prescribing errors can have harmful results. Analyzing prescribing error reports submitted over a 12- year period, this article recommends strategies to reduce risks associated with prescribing, including use of computerized provider order entry systems and standard order sets.
Journal Article > Study
PIPc study: development of indicators of potentially inappropriate prescribing in children (PIPc) in primary care using a modified Delphi technique.
Barry E, O'Brien K, Moriarty F, et al; PIPc Project Steering group. BMJ Open. 2016;6:e012079.
Although certain medication classes pose increased risks to children, well-defined criteria for potentially inappropriate prescribing for pediatric patients have not been established. This study described an iterative consensus-building process which identified 12 indicators of potentially inappropriate medications for children. Future studies will test the validity of these indicators.
Journal Article > Review
A literature review of the training offered to qualified prescribers to use electronic prescribing systems: why is it so important?
Brown CL, Reygate K, Slee A, et al. Int J Pharm Pract. 2017;25:195-202.
Insufficient training on electronic health record systems can hinder user satisfaction. This literature review assessed the evidence on training methods, such as simulation scenarios and classroom-based sessions, for electronic prescribing systems. The authors suggest that future research should examine how to educate users about challenges associated with electronic systems.
Journal Article > Commentary
Incorporating indications into medication ordering—time to enter the age of reason.
Schiff GD, Seoane-Vazquez E, Wright A. N Engl J Med. 2016;375:306-309.
Clear communication during medication prescribing can enhance safety. This commentary advocates for indications-based prescribing coupled with health information technology as a way to improve team communication, medication reconciliation, and patient education and compliance.
Book/Report
Antibiotic Stewardship in Acute Care: A Practical Playbook.
National Quality Partners. Washington, DC: National Quality Forum; 2016.
Antimicrobial stewardship has been promoted as a strategy to improve patient safety by reducing overuse of antibiotics to prevent hospital-acquired infections. This report draws from the experience of existing programs to summarize practical strategies for implementing initiatives. Core elements include engaging leadership, monitoring effectiveness, and reporting benchmarks.
Journal Article > Study
Evaluation of frequency of paediatric oral liquid medication dosing errors by caregivers: amoxicillin and josamycin.
Berthe-Aucejo A, Girard D, Lorrot M, et al. Arch Dis Child. 2016;101:359-364.
This prospective observational study demonstrated that caregivers of pediatric patients experienced difficulties in reconstituting and dosing liquid medications, consistent with prior studies. Family education and enhanced instructions are needed to improve safety of pediatric medication use.
Press Release/Announcement
FDA Drug Safety Communication: FDA cautions about dosing errors when switching between different oral formulations of antifungal Noxafil (posaconazole); label changes approved.
MedWatch Safety Alert. Silver Spring, MD: US Food and Drug Administration; January 4, 2016.
This announcement alerts prescribers to differences in two oral formulations of the same medication that can lead to dosing errors. The FDA suggests that clinicians specify dosage form, strength, and frequency on prescriptions for this drug to reduce the risk of patient harm and recommend that pharmacists follow up with prescribers if such information is missing.
Journal Article > Commentary
Strategies for flipping the script on opioid overprescribing.
Wright AP, Becker WC, Schiff GD. JAMA Intern Med. 2016;176:7-8.
Opioid misuse is at epidemic proportions in the United States. This commentary advocates for physicians who recognize that their patients are misusing opioids to carefully approach changes in treatment strategies. Providers should adjust their prescribing behavior, counseling skills, and use of electronic health records to determine an effective care plan to address the patient's pain.
Journal Article > Study
Impact of a drug shortage on medication errors and clinical outcomes in the pediatric intensive care unit.
Hughes KM, Goswami ES, Morris JL. J Pediatr Pharmacol Ther. 2015;20:453-461.
Drug shortages can result in safety consequences, as studies have shown a higher rate of treatment failure and increased adverse events associated with unavailability of first-line therapies. However, this study did not find any change in adverse events in pediatric intensive care unit patients during a shortage of commonly used sedatives and injectable opioid pain medications. The authors note that advance warning of the shortage and development of standardized algorithms for drug substitution may have mitigated the potential safety hazards.
Audiovisual
Seven (potentially) deadly prescribing errors.
Graham LR, Scudder L, Stokowski L. Medscape Multispecialty. October 22, 2015.
Errors in the prescribing process can lead to adverse drug events. This slide set provides information about common problems in prescribing such as selecting the wrong drug in a drop-down menu, formulation mix-ups, alert fatigue, poor quality of data in health information systems, and use of ambiguous abbreviations.
Journal Article > Commentary
Hospice diagnosis: polypharmacy—a teachable moment.
Larson CK, Kao H. JAMA Intern Med. 2015;175:1750-1751.
Overprescribing can increase risk of dementia, particularly among older patients. This commentary describes an incident involving a patient with moderate dementia that worsened when opioids were prescribed following a fall. After a geriatrician evaluated the patient and suspected polypharmacy, the drugs were stopped, caregivers were educated about how to treat the patient, and the patient improved. Highlighting the importance of environmental interventions in treating this patient, the author reviews strategies to address neuropsychiatric symptoms of dementia.
Newspaper/Magazine Article
FDA Advise-ERR: avoid using the error-prone abbreviation, TPA.
ISMP Medication Safety Alert! Acute Care Edition. September 24, 2015;20:1,4-5.
Describing incidents involving abbreviation confusion for ACTIVASE (alteplase) and TNKASE (tenecteplase) that resulted in wrong-drug errors, this newsletter article recommends ways to prevent such errors, including avoiding use of abbreviations and removing certain abbreviations from standardized order sets.
Journal Article > Study
Pediatric prehospital medication dosing errors: a mixed-methods study.
Hoyle JD Jr, Sleight D, Henry R, Chassee T, Fales B, Mavis B. Prehosp Emerg Care. 2016;20:117-124.
Medication errors are common in pediatric patients who require care from emergency medical services. This study found that most paramedics had limited experience and comfort in administering medications to children. Investigators identified several remediable barriers to improving medication safety in this setting.
