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Article
Publication date: 23 March 2010

Medication error prevalence

Ana Belén Jiménez Muñoz, Antonio Muiño Miguez, María Paz Rodriguez Pérez, María Dolores Vigil Escribano, María Esther Durán Garcia and María Sanjurjo Saez

Healthcare risk epidemiology identifies medication error as the commonest cause of adverse effects on patients. Medication error can occur at any phase of the complex…

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Abstract

Purpose

Healthcare risk epidemiology identifies medication error as the commonest cause of adverse effects on patients. Medication error can occur at any phase of the complex medication process so prevalence rates need to be estimated at each drug treatment phase: prescription, transcription and administration along with their clinical repercussions. This paper aims to investigate this issue.

Design/methodology/approach

Medication errors were recorded on an ad hoc sheet and staff were observed handling medications. Recorded errors were later classified and their clinical repercussions determined by experts.

Findings

In total 757 inpatients and 5,466 drug prescriptions were studied. The prescription error rate was 4.79 percent (95 percent CI 4.21‐5.36). The most frequent error in this phase was failing to observe international prescribing standards. The highest error rate was found in transcription (14.61 percent, 95 percent CI 13.67‐15.54). Almost 1,900 dose administrations were observed. There was a 9.32 percent error rate (95 percent CI 7.98‐10.67). The commonest error in this phase was omission. Most were transcription errors, which were detected before harm was done.

Research limitations/implications

The dispensation phase is absent.

Practical implications

Errors can be reduced if they are understood. Education and training based on the study's findings can reduce medication errors.

Originality/value

The paper highlights ways to reduce errors in the medication process.

Details

International Journal of Health Care Quality Assurance, vol. 23 no. 3
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/09526861011029389
ISSN: 0952-6862

Keywords

  • Medicines
  • Quality control
  • Patient care
  • Spain

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