Objectives: To study the availability of 13 specific antidotes in hospitals and correlate the availability of those antidotes to the number of poisonings seen in hospitals using N-acetylcysteine and naloxone consumption as a surrogate.
Methods: Pharmacy directors of hospitals with an emergency department were surveyed for number of adequately stocked antidotes (N-acetylcysteine, ethanol, cyanide antidote kit or hydroxycobalamine, deferoxamine, digoxin-immune FAB, dimercaprol, flumazenil, glucagon, methylene blue, naloxone, physostigmine, pralidoxime and pyridoxine).
Results: Data were obtained from 96 of 112 (86%) of the pharmacies surveyed. Number of adequately stocked antidotes per hospital ranged from zero to nine of 13. There was a correlation between all hospital characteristics evaluated and the number of adequately stocked antidotes (P<0.05). Correlations between the number of adequately stocked antidotes and the amount of N-acetylcysteine and naloxone consumed were significant (rs=0.58, P<0.001; r(s)=0.53, P<0.001). The amount of N-acetylcysteine consumed, the number of annual visits to the emergency department and the number of hours of pharmacy coverage on weekends independently predicted the presence of adequately stocked antidotes.
Conclusions: Larger hospitals are more likely to have adequate stocks of antidotes. Adequate stocking of antidotes is significantly correlated with the amount of N-acetyl- cysteine and naloxone consumed. This suggests that hospitals more likely to see serious acetaminophen and opiate poisonings are more likely to maintain adequate stocks of antidotes.