sábado, 20 de mayo de 2017

Incidence of clinically relevant medication errors in the era of electronically prepopulated medication reconciliation forms: a retrospective chart review. | AHRQ Patient Safety Network

Incidence of clinically relevant medication errors in the era of electronically prepopulated medication reconciliation forms: a retrospective chart review. | AHRQ Patient Safety Network

At hospital admission, pre-populated medication list drawn from outpatient list wrong about half the time.
CMAJ Open. 2017;5:E345-E353.



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  • Study
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  • Published May 2017

Incidence of clinically relevant medication errors in the era of electronically prepopulated medication reconciliation forms: a retrospective chart review.



    An accurate list of patient medications is a necessary precursor for safe medication use. One strategy to improve medication reconciliation is to provide a list of dispensed outpatient medications to inpatient clinicians upon hospital admission via an electronic medication reconciliation process. This retrospective chart review study compared a research pharmacist–generated gold standard medication list to the actual medications ordered during an admission after such a process was implemented. The study team identified medication discrepancies between the pharmacist-generated and admission-ordered medication lists and noted any inappropriately prescribed or continued medications. Medication errors were present in nearly half of the patient records; about 9% of errors were clinically important. The authors raise concerns that electronically prepopulated medication reconciliation forms may actually adversely impact medication safety. A previous WebM&M commentary discussed how to enhance accuracy of medication reconciliation.






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