Abstract

ObjectivesTo assess the impact of electronically prescribed mixed-drug infusions on the prevalence and types of prescription errors and staff time. Design, setting and participantsBefore-and-after study on acute medical wards of a large UK teaching hospital, utilising patient and staff data from the assessed wards. InterventionElectronically-generated mixed-drug infusions. Main outcome measures(1) Rate of prescription errors (divided into errors of commission and omission); (2) time taken to process patient discharge prescriptions containing a mixed-drug infusion; and (3) time between prescription and administration of mixed-drug infusions. Results100 errors of omission were detected pre-intervention, whilst none were detected post intervention. 6 errors of commission were identified at baseline, whilst 2 were highlighted post intervention (p = 0.149). 14 physicochemically incompatible infusions were prescribed at baseline, post-intervention all infusions were compatible (p < 0.01). Time spent processing discharge prescriptions fell from 60 min (SME±1.7) to 26 min (SME± 2.7; p < 0.01). The median time from prescription to administration reduced from 120 min (95 % CI 106–150) to 65 min (95 % CI 43–85; p < 0.01). ConclusionsThe intervention eliminated errors of omission and facilitated the prescribing of compatible multicomponent infusions. Electronically prescribed mixed-drug infusions also reduced both the time taken to complete discharge prescriptions and the time taken to commence such infusions.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call