Emergency room errors usually include drug mistakes
On
television, hospital Emergency Rooms (or Emergency
Departments as they are now called) are filled with
highly trained and efficient doctors who seem almost
always to be able to revive and save patients, whether
they arrived after a heart attack or a car accident.
Studies at real life ERs tell a different story. Medical
errors abound, leading to deaths and injuries. In fact,
the United States Pharmacopeia (USP) national database
contains more than 360,000 medication error reports
since its inception in 1998.
A
recent report by the USP noted that the leading
medication errors in emergency departments are:
*
Prescribing errors -- when a physician or other
authorized provider fails to prescribe the correct
medication through verbal or written communication;
*
Omission errors -- involving the failure to administer a
prescribed medication; and
*
Improper dosage errors -- when a patient receives the
incorrect dose of a medication.
In
2001 alone, 105,603 errors were documented by Medmarx,
the USPs national database for medication errors. Of
the total, 2,063 errors (two percent), occurred in the
emergency department of a hospital or health care
system. Although the majority of errors were corrected
before causing harm to the patient, 147, or 7.6 percent
of total errors, resulted in patient injury. Of this
number, 123 resulted in temporary harm to the patient
and required intervention, 21 required initial or
prolonged hospitalization, one may have contributed to
or resulted in permanent patient harm, one required
intervention to sustain life, and one error resulted in
a patient's death.
The
Medmarx 2001 data report indicates that health care
facilities attribute medication errors to many causes,
and often cite distractions (47%), workload increases
(24%) and staffing issues (36%) as contributing factors.
Additionally, weight calculations are critical in
determining appropriate medication dosages for children.
Miscalculations in patient weight conversions from
pounds to kilograms, which result in improper dosing
errors, were common in pediatric departments. Failure to
record drug allergies also was identified as a top
pediatric mistake.
In the
emergency department, the combination of interruptions
and multiple concurrent tasks is prevalent in medication
errors. More than 58% of emergency department errors can
be attributed to an improper dose, an omission, or a
prescribing error (i.e. wrong drug, wrong dose or
incorrect directions). Heparin, a blood thinner used to
treat and prevent blood clots, received the most reports
of improper dosage. Diltiazem (for hypertension and
angina) and pediatric diphtheria tetanus toxoid (vaccine
for disease prevention) were also frequently cited for
improper dosages.
SOURCE: Leading
Medication Errors in Hospital Emergency Departments,
U.S. Pharmacopeia, March 13, 2003.
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