4.1 Review

The Effects of Bar-coding Technology on Medication Errors: A Systematic Literature Review

Journal

JOURNAL OF PATIENT SAFETY
Volume 17, Issue 3, Pages E192-E206

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/PTS.0000000000000366

Keywords

adverse drug events; bar code; incidents; medication errors

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This systematic review examined the impact of bar-coding technology on preventing medication errors in hospital settings, focusing on prospective methodologies. A total of 10 studies were included, with results showing overall positive effects associated with bar-coding implementation in reducing medication errors, particularly targeted on wrong dose, wrong drug, wrong patient, unauthorized drug, and wrong route errors.
Background The bar-coding technology adoptions have risen drastically in U.S. health systems in the past decade. However, few studies have addressed the impact of bar-coding technology with strong prospective methodologies and the research, which has been conducted from both in-pharmacy and bedside implementations. Objective This systematic literature review is to examine the effectiveness of bar-coding technology on preventing medication errors and what types of medication errors may be prevented in the hospital setting. Methods A systematic search of databases was performed from 1998 to December 2016. Studies measuring the effect of bar-coding technology on medication errors were included in a full-text review. Studies with the outcomes other than medication errors such as efficiency or workarounds were excluded. The outcomes were measured and findings were summarized for each retained study. Results A total of 2603 articles were initially identified and 10 studies, which used prospective before-and-after study design, were fully reviewed in this article. Of the 10 included studies, 9 took place in the United States, whereas the remaining was conducted in the United Kingdom. One research article focused on bar-coding implementation in a pharmacy setting, whereas the other 9 focused on bar coding within patient care areas. All 10 studies showed overall positive effects associated with bar-coding implementation. Conclusions The results of this review show that bar-coding technology may reduce medication errors in hospital settings, particularly on preventing targeted wrong dose, wrong drug, wrong patient, unauthorized drug, and wrong route errors.

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