• Dtsch Arztebl Int · Sep 2012

    Review

    Medication errors in pediatric emergencies: a systematic analysis.

    • Jost Kaufmann, Michael Laschat, and Frank Wappler.
    • Institute of Anesthesiology at Witten/Herdecke University, Department of Paediatric Anesthesia, Cologne Children's Hospital, Germany. kaufmannj@kliniken-koeln.de
    • Dtsch Arztebl Int. 2012 Sep 1;109(38):609-16.

    BackgroundErrors in drug administration are among the commonest medical errors. Children are particularly at risk for such errors because of the need to calculate doses individually. Doses that are ten times the correct amount (1000% of the correct dose) are occasionally given and can be life-threatening. In a simulated resuscitation in a pediatric emergency room, an error of this type occurred for one of the 32 medications that were ordered. The highest error rates are to be expected in prehospital emergency medicine. In this review, we analyze the process of ordering medications and describe the potential interventions for lowering error rates that have been evaluated to date.MethodSystematic literature reviewResultsWe found 32 original publications that concerned the evaluation of interventions for lowering error rates in the ordering of medications for children. Error rates can be lowered by interventions that improve prescribers' knowledge of pediatric pharmacotherapy (courses, immediately accessible sources of information) and by aids to the cognitive process of ordering medication (calculators, computer programs, tables of doses by weight). They can also be lowered by raising awareness of the problem of erroneous medication ordering and by monitoring medication orders, as well as by structured communication and standardized, unambiguously labeled drug preparations. In the hospital setting, computer programs for medication orders with a built-in pediatric pharmacological database are highly recommended. In the prehospital setting, the "pediatric emergency ruler" enables accurate estimation of the patient's weight, provides age-appropriate dosage recommendations, and directly indicates the steps needed for calculation of the correct dose.ConclusionChildren in medical emergency situations are at significant risk for medication errors. The measures described here can markedly lower the rate of dangerous errors.

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