4.2 Article

Prevalence of medication discrepancies in pediatric patients transferred between hospital wards

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACY
Volume 43, Issue 4, Pages 909-917

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11096-020-01196-w

Keywords

Children; Hospitals; Medication discrepancies; Medication errors; Patient transfer

Funding

  1. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel - Brazil [001]

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Children are more vulnerable to harm from medication errors, with internal transfer and hospital discharge being the main transition points where unintentional discrepancies occur, with omission of medication being the most common type of discrepancy.
Background Children are more susceptible to harm from medication errors and adverse drug reactions when compared to adults. Such events may occur from medication discrepancies while transitioning patients throughout the healthcare system. Contributing factors include medication discontinuity and lack of information by the healthcare team. Objective To analyze the prevalence of medication discrepancies in transition points of care in a pediatric department. Setting Pediatric department of a public hospital in Northeast Brazil. Method A cross-sectional study was carried out from August 2017 to March 2018. Data collection consisted of the following steps: collection of sociodemographic data, clinical interview with the patient's caregiver, registration of patient prescriptions, and evaluation of medical records. Medication discrepancies were classified as intentional and unintentional. The unintentional medication discrepancies were classified as omission of medication, therapeutic duplicity, and differences in dose, frequency, or route of administration. Main outcomes measure Discrepancy profile identified at admission, internal transfer and hospital discharge. Results Among the 114 patients included in the study, 85 (74.5%) patients had at least one unintentional medication discrepancy, of which 16 (14.0%) patients presented medication discrepancies at hospital admission, 42 (36.8%) patients at internal transfer, and 52 (45.6%) patients during discharge. Omission of medication represented 20 (74.1%) errors at admission, 26 (37.7%) errors at internal transfer, and 80 (100.0%) errors at hospital discharge. Conclusions The main transition points of care where unintentional discrepancies occurred in the studied pediatric department were at internal transfer and hospital discharge, with omission being the most common type of unintentional discrepancy.

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