Medication errors in pediatric inpatients: a study based on a national mandatory reporting system

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Medication errors in pediatric inpatients : a study based on a national mandatory reporting system. / Rishoej, Rikke Mie; Almarsdóttir, Anna Birna; Christesen, Henrik Thybo; Kjeldsen, Lene Juel.

In: European Journal of Pediatrics, Vol. 176, No. 12, 12.2017, p. 1697-1705.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rishoej, RM, Almarsdóttir, AB, Christesen, HT & Kjeldsen, LJ 2017, 'Medication errors in pediatric inpatients: a study based on a national mandatory reporting system', European Journal of Pediatrics, vol. 176, no. 12, pp. 1697-1705. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-017-3023-8

APA

Rishoej, R. M., Almarsdóttir, A. B., Christesen, H. T., & Kjeldsen, L. J. (2017). Medication errors in pediatric inpatients: a study based on a national mandatory reporting system. European Journal of Pediatrics, 176(12), 1697-1705. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-017-3023-8

Vancouver

Rishoej RM, Almarsdóttir AB, Christesen HT, Kjeldsen LJ. Medication errors in pediatric inpatients: a study based on a national mandatory reporting system. European Journal of Pediatrics. 2017 Dec;176(12):1697-1705. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-017-3023-8

Author

Rishoej, Rikke Mie ; Almarsdóttir, Anna Birna ; Christesen, Henrik Thybo ; Kjeldsen, Lene Juel. / Medication errors in pediatric inpatients : a study based on a national mandatory reporting system. In: European Journal of Pediatrics. 2017 ; Vol. 176, No. 12. pp. 1697-1705.

Bibtex

@article{f996d71674c044568e39884ff77aefca,
title = "Medication errors in pediatric inpatients: a study based on a national mandatory reporting system",
abstract = "The aim was to describe medication errors (MEs) in hospitalized children reported to the national mandatory reporting and learning system, the Danish Patient Safety Database (DPSD). MEs were extracted from DPSD from the 5-year period of 2010-2014. We included reports from public hospitals on patients aged 0-17 years and categorized by reporters as medication-related. Reports from psychiatric wards and outpatient clinics were excluded. A ME was defined as any medication-related error occurring in the medication process whether harmful or not. MEs were categorized as harmful if they resulted in actual harm or interventions to prevent harm. MEs were further categorized according to occurrence in the medication process, type of error, and the medicines involved. A total of 2071 MEs including 487 harmful MEs were identified. Most MEs occurred during prescribing (40.8%), followed by dispensing (38.7%). Harmful MEs occurred mainly during dispensing (40.3%). Dosing errors were the most reported type of error, 47.7% of all MEs and 45.4% of harmful MEs. Antibiotics and analgesics were the most frequently reported medication classes. Common medicines associated with MEs included morphine, paracetamol, and gentamicin. MEs caused no harm (74.9%), mild (11.7%), moderate (10.5%), or severe harm (1.3%), but none were lethal.CONCLUSION: MEs in hospitalized children occur in all medication processes and mainly involve dosing errors. Strategies should be developed to prevent MEs as these still threaten medication safety in pediatric inpatients. What is known: • Hospitalized children are more likely to experience medication errors than adults. • Voluntary national and local reporting and learning systems have previously been used to describe the nature and types of medication errors. What is new: • Medication errors in hospitalized children occur in all steps of the medication process, most frequently involving dosing errors and most commonly involving morphine, paracetamol, and gentamicin. • Of the medication errors, 1.3% cause severe harm, but no fatal errors were reported.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Rishoej, {Rikke Mie} and Almarsd{\'o}ttir, {Anna Birna} and Christesen, {Henrik Thybo} and Kjeldsen, {Lene Juel}",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1007/s00431-017-3023-8",
language = "English",
volume = "176",
pages = "1697--1705",
journal = "Acta Paediatrica Hungarica",
issn = "0340-6199",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Medication errors in pediatric inpatients

T2 - a study based on a national mandatory reporting system

AU - Rishoej, Rikke Mie

AU - Almarsdóttir, Anna Birna

AU - Christesen, Henrik Thybo

AU - Kjeldsen, Lene Juel

PY - 2017/12

Y1 - 2017/12

N2 - The aim was to describe medication errors (MEs) in hospitalized children reported to the national mandatory reporting and learning system, the Danish Patient Safety Database (DPSD). MEs were extracted from DPSD from the 5-year period of 2010-2014. We included reports from public hospitals on patients aged 0-17 years and categorized by reporters as medication-related. Reports from psychiatric wards and outpatient clinics were excluded. A ME was defined as any medication-related error occurring in the medication process whether harmful or not. MEs were categorized as harmful if they resulted in actual harm or interventions to prevent harm. MEs were further categorized according to occurrence in the medication process, type of error, and the medicines involved. A total of 2071 MEs including 487 harmful MEs were identified. Most MEs occurred during prescribing (40.8%), followed by dispensing (38.7%). Harmful MEs occurred mainly during dispensing (40.3%). Dosing errors were the most reported type of error, 47.7% of all MEs and 45.4% of harmful MEs. Antibiotics and analgesics were the most frequently reported medication classes. Common medicines associated with MEs included morphine, paracetamol, and gentamicin. MEs caused no harm (74.9%), mild (11.7%), moderate (10.5%), or severe harm (1.3%), but none were lethal.CONCLUSION: MEs in hospitalized children occur in all medication processes and mainly involve dosing errors. Strategies should be developed to prevent MEs as these still threaten medication safety in pediatric inpatients. What is known: • Hospitalized children are more likely to experience medication errors than adults. • Voluntary national and local reporting and learning systems have previously been used to describe the nature and types of medication errors. What is new: • Medication errors in hospitalized children occur in all steps of the medication process, most frequently involving dosing errors and most commonly involving morphine, paracetamol, and gentamicin. • Of the medication errors, 1.3% cause severe harm, but no fatal errors were reported.

AB - The aim was to describe medication errors (MEs) in hospitalized children reported to the national mandatory reporting and learning system, the Danish Patient Safety Database (DPSD). MEs were extracted from DPSD from the 5-year period of 2010-2014. We included reports from public hospitals on patients aged 0-17 years and categorized by reporters as medication-related. Reports from psychiatric wards and outpatient clinics were excluded. A ME was defined as any medication-related error occurring in the medication process whether harmful or not. MEs were categorized as harmful if they resulted in actual harm or interventions to prevent harm. MEs were further categorized according to occurrence in the medication process, type of error, and the medicines involved. A total of 2071 MEs including 487 harmful MEs were identified. Most MEs occurred during prescribing (40.8%), followed by dispensing (38.7%). Harmful MEs occurred mainly during dispensing (40.3%). Dosing errors were the most reported type of error, 47.7% of all MEs and 45.4% of harmful MEs. Antibiotics and analgesics were the most frequently reported medication classes. Common medicines associated with MEs included morphine, paracetamol, and gentamicin. MEs caused no harm (74.9%), mild (11.7%), moderate (10.5%), or severe harm (1.3%), but none were lethal.CONCLUSION: MEs in hospitalized children occur in all medication processes and mainly involve dosing errors. Strategies should be developed to prevent MEs as these still threaten medication safety in pediatric inpatients. What is known: • Hospitalized children are more likely to experience medication errors than adults. • Voluntary national and local reporting and learning systems have previously been used to describe the nature and types of medication errors. What is new: • Medication errors in hospitalized children occur in all steps of the medication process, most frequently involving dosing errors and most commonly involving morphine, paracetamol, and gentamicin. • Of the medication errors, 1.3% cause severe harm, but no fatal errors were reported.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1007/s00431-017-3023-8

DO - 10.1007/s00431-017-3023-8

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28965285

VL - 176

SP - 1697

EP - 1705

JO - Acta Paediatrica Hungarica

JF - Acta Paediatrica Hungarica

SN - 0340-6199

IS - 12

ER -

ID: 184169616