Potential medication dosing errors in outpatient pediatrics
- PMID: 16356427
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2005.07.043
Potential medication dosing errors in outpatient pediatrics
Abstract
Objective: To determine the prevalence of potential dosing errors of medication dispensed to children for 22 common medications.
Study design: Using automated pharmacy data from 3 health maintenance organizations (HMOs), we randomly selected up to 120 children with a new dispensing prescription for each drug of interest, giving 1933 study subjects. Errors were defined as potential overdoses or potential underdoses. Error rate in 2 HMOs that use paper prescriptions was compared with 1 HMO that uses an electronic prescription writer.
Results: Approximately 15% of children were dispensed a medication with a potential dosing error: 8% were potential overdoses and 7% were potential underdoses. Among children weighing <35 kg, only 67% of doses were dispensed within recommended dosing ranges, and more than 1% were dispensed at more than twice the recommended maximum dose. Analgesics were most likely to be potentially overdosed (15%), whereas antiepileptics were most likely potentially underdosed (20%). Potential error rates were not lower at the site with an electronic prescription writer.
Conclusions: Potential medication dosing errors occur frequently in outpatient pediatrics. Studies on the clinical impact of these potential errors and effective error prevention strategies are needed.
Comment in
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Will, ideas, and execution: their role in reducing adverse medication events.J Pediatr. 2005 Dec;147(6):727-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jpeds.2005.09.022. J Pediatr. 2005. PMID: 16356419 No abstract available.
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