Jump to content

IOM Reports One Medication Error per Day


AZCEP

Recommended Posts

Report: Drug Errors Injure More Than 1.5M

Sign In to E-Mail This Print Save

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: July 21, 2006

Filed at 1:55 a.m. ET

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Medication mistakes injure well over 1.5 million Americans every year, a toll too often unrecognized and unfought, says a sobering call to action.

At least a quarter of the errors are preventable, the Institute of Medicine said Thursday in urging major steps by the government, health providers and patients alike.

Topping the list: All prescriptions should be written electronically by 2010, a move one specialist called as crucial to safe care as X-ray machines.

Perhaps the report's most stunning finding was that, on average, a hospitalized patient is subject to at least one medication error per day.

A serious drug error can add more than $8,750 to the hospital bill of a single patient. Assuming that hospitals commit 400,000 preventable drug errors each year, that's $3.5 billion -- not counting lost productivity and other costs -- from hospitals alone, the report concluded.

''I'm a patient-safety researcher (yet) I was surprised and shocked at just how common and how serious a problem this is,'' said Dr. Albert Wu of Johns Hopkins University, who co-authored Thursday's report.

Worse, there's too little incentive for health providers to invest in technology that could prevent some errors today, added Dr. J. Lyle Bootman, the University of Arizona's pharmacy dean, who co-chaired the IOM probe.

''We're paid whether these errors occur or not,'' lamented Bootman, who recently experienced the threat firsthand as his son-in-law dodged some drug near-misses while in intensive care in a reputable hospital.

The new probe couldn't say how many of the injuries are serious, or how many victims die. A 1999 estimate put deaths, conservatively, at 7,000 a year.

Even the total injury estimate is conservative, Bootman stressed. It includes drug errors in hospitals, nursing homes and among Medicare outpatients, but it doesn't attempt to count mix-ups in most doctors' offices or by patients themselves.

There have been efforts to improve patient safety in the six years since the IOM first spotlighted medical mistakes of all kinds, including recent bar-coding of drugs to minimize mix-ups in hospitals and pharmacies.

But clearly more are needed, and the new report highlights how the nation's fragmented health care system is conducive to drug errors, said Dr. Donald Berwick, a Harvard professor who heads the nonprofit Institute for Healthcare Improvement.

''This isn't a matter of doctors and nurses trying harder not to harm people,'' Berwick cautioned. ''Safety isn't automatic. It has to be designed into the system.''

Medications' sheer volume and complexity illustrate the difficulty. There are more than 10,000 prescription drugs on the market, and 300,000 over-the-counter products. It's impossible to memorize their different usage and dosage instructions, which may vary according to the patient's age, weight and other risk factors, such as bad kidneys.

Plus, four of every five U.S. adults take at least one medication or dietary supplement every day; almost a third take at least five. The more you use, the greater your risk of bad interactions, especially if multiple doctors prescribe different drugs without knowing what you already take.

Add doctors' notoriously bad handwriting and sound-alike drug names: Was that order for 10 milligrams or 10 migrams? The hormone Premarin or the antibiotic Primaxin?

Moreover, consumer instructions are woefully inadequate, the report concludes. One study found parents gave their children the wrong dose of over-the-counter fever medicines 47 percent of the time.

Then there was the newly diagnosed asthmatic wondering why his inhaler didn't work. Asked how he used it, the middle-age man squirted two puffs into the air and tried to breathe the mist. His original doctor had demonstrated the inhaler without telling him to spray it inside his mouth.

Among the report's recommendations:

--The government should speed electronic prescribing, including fostering technology improvements so that the myriad computer programs used by doctors, hospitals and drugstores are compatible.

Fewer than about 20 percent of prescriptions are electronic, said report co-author Michael Cohen, president of the Institute for Safe Medication Practices. E-prescribing does more than counter bad handwriting. The computer programs can be linked to databases that flash an alert if the prescribed dose seems high or if the patient's records show use of another drug that can dangerously interact.

--Patients and their families must be aggressive in questioning doctors, nurses and pharmacists about medications. Get a list of each drug you're prescribed, why and the dose from each doctor and pharmacy you use, and show it at every doctor visit.

''Take active steps to make sure you know what you're getting, and is it what you need,'' said report co-author Dr. Wilson Pace of the University of Colorado.

--The nation should invest about $100 million annually on research into drug errors and how to prevent them. Among the most-needed studies is the impact of free drug samples, which often lack proper labeling, on medication safety.

--The Food and Drug Administration should improve the quality of drug information leaflets that accompany prescription drugs, but often have incomplete information or are written in consumer-confusing jargon.

--The government should establish national telephone hotlines to help patients unable to understand printed drug information because of illiteracy, language barriers or other problems.

The Institute of Medicine is an independent organization chartered by Congress to advise the government on health matters.

So, let's take an honest look at what can be done from a prehospital view. Can you forsee any of your agencies taking the necessary steps, or will it fall back to the provider with the syringe/pill?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I read this article and yes med errors are a tremendous issue out there. No one has focused on med errors in EMS though. I am sure that everyone has had at least one drug error in the ambulance from giving Epi every 6 or so minutes in a code to a full major med error like grabbing the wrong medication out of the drug box.

Other errors could be lidocaine to a pacemaker patient

pulling morphine out of the narc kit instead of valium on a critical ob seizing patient 3 days past her due date

Giving atropine IM instead of vistaril im

Or nearly pushing 40meq of KCL to a patient via IV - not diluting it in a 1000ml bag of saline

I've seen all these happen.

so can we be more vigilent? Can we be assured that this will never happen to us HECK NO

What we can do is educate providers more.

Make the drug boxes more easy to navigate by having each drug in it's place and labeled with big black letters showing the med name.

Make the drug companies be a little better in labelling.

Case in point, the manufacturer of the potassium chloride bottles, the ones that have 20 30 or 40 meq's of potassium in them that are required to be placed in a 1000 ml bag of fluid so the drug is diluted used to have no warnings on them. It was not till about 8 years ago that the manufacturer had received so many reports of fatal drug administrations that they put right by the needle port in big letters MUST BE DILUTED did the errors decrease. They also decreased the errors by advising pharmacies to mix this stuff in the pharmacy and deliver it to the ER or floor. Deaths have dropped dramatically and only still occur because some hospitals are too cheap to buy either the pre-mix or to require their pharmacists to mix it up for the floors.

Med errors can be nearly eliminated by doing the following things:

1. read the order

2. re-read the order

3. get the drug and read the drug name

4. repeat number 1 and 2

5. mix or draw up the med

6. re-read the med bottle or syringe and compare that to the order

7. Ask about allergies

8. Make sure the patient you are giving this to matches the patient who the order is placed on

9. Have someone you work with verify that the right med is what you are going to give.

10. give the med

That's a lot of steps but what is more work - doing the 10 steps above or being named in a lawsuit and having to defend yourself after you gave the wrong drug and it hurt, maimed or killed someone????

Think of it another way - if it was your family member wouldn't you want the same vigilence done just as you would do?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This thread is quite old. Please consider starting a new thread rather than reviving this one.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...