• Int J Qual Health Care · Jun 2003

    Multicenter Study Comparative Study

    Common types of medication errors on long-term psychiatric care units.

    • Hiroto Ito and Syun Yamazumi.
    • Healthcare Evaluation Section, Department of Management Science, National Institute of Public Health, Wako, Saitama, Japan. ito@niph.go.jp
    • Int J Qual Health Care. 2003 Jun 1;15(3):207-12.

    ObjectiveThis multi-center study identified the most frequent types of medication errors in long-term psychiatric care hospitals.SettingJapan.Design And Study ParticipantsWe asked 132 units in 44 Japanese psychiatric hospitals to introduce an in-patient incident reporting system on potential adverse drug events (PADEs) for the period 1 October to 30 November 2000. We analyzed types of PADE, outcomes, and characteristics of patients, staff, and units.ResultsWe received 221 PADE incident reports from 85 units of 44 hospitals. One-quarter (24.9%) of the incidents were intercepted before reaching patients. The frequency of monitoring of the patients by clinical staff in response to medication errors increased by 8.1%. Wrong drug administration, i.e. giving a drug to a patient that was not the drug prescribed for that patient, was the most common type of incident (35.7%). Logistic regression analysis revealed that wrong drug administration occurred more frequently on units with either fewer registered nurses, or two or more patients with the same (or similar) name staying on the same unit. Incident reporters evaluated wrong drug administration as being potentially more serious than the other types of medication error. Wrong drug administration was seen more frequently in units with no patient name printed on medication drug pouches.ConclusionsWrong drug administration was the most common type of PADE, and may result in more serious consequences than others. Even a simple organizational quality improvement effort, in which printed patients' names are placed on the drug pouch (not only with each prescription but with each drug administration), could reduce risk to patients from adverse outcomes due to medication errors.

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