Abstract

BackgroundMedication errors have been reported to be a leading cause of death in hospitalized patients. In this study we focused on identifying and quantifying errors in the handwritten drug ordering and dispensing documentation processes which could possibly lead to adverse drug events.MethodsWe studied 1,934 ordered agents (165 consecutive patients) retrospectively for medication documentation errors. Errors were categorized into: Prescribing errors, transcription errors and administration documentation errors on the nurses' medication lists. The legibility of prescriptions was analyzed to explore its possible influence on the error rate in the documentation process.ResultsDocumentation errors occurred in 65 of 1,934 prescribed agents (3.5%). The incidence of patient charts showing at least one error was 43%. Prescribing errors were found 39 times (37%), transcription errors 56 times (53%), and administration documentation errors 10 times (10%). The handwriting readability was rated as good in 2%, moderate in 42%, bad in 52%, and unreadable in 4%.ConclusionsThis study revealed a high incidence of documentation errors in the traditional handwritten prescription process. Most errors occurred when prescriptions were transcribed into the patients' chart. The readability of the handwritten prescriptions was generally bad. Replacing the traditional handwritten documentation process with information technology could potentially improve the safety in the medication process.

Highlights

  • Medication errors have been reported to be a leading cause of death in hospitalized patients

  • Medical records were analyzed for readability of handwritten medication entries and for errors in the medication documentation

  • Sixteen residents were in charge of prescribing drugs to patients. This observational study does not measure the effectiveness of an intervention to improve quality in health, we report the results, where appropriate, following the Standards for Quality Improvement Reporting Excellence (SQUIRE) [14,15]

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Summary

Introduction

Medication errors have been reported to be a leading cause of death in hospitalized patients. In this study we focused on identifying and quantifying errors in the handwritten drug ordering and dispensing documentation processes which could possibly lead to adverse drug events. The drug prescription and administration process in most hospitals worldwide is still based on handwritten medical chart entries [2,9,10]. Several steps in this complex and unchecked process can harbour a high number of relevant errors. These undetected medication errors in patients’ drug documentation may be a significant source of ADEs [11,12]. Possible strategies to reduce the incidence of errors in this high-risk process are discussed [13]

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