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ORIGINAL ARTICLE |
1 Kent & Medway NHS & Social Care Partnership Trust, St Martins Hospital, Canterbury, UK
2 Royal College of Psychiatrists Research and Training Unit; Oxleas NHS Trust, London, UK
3 Oxleas NHS Trust, Dartford, Kent, UK
Correspondence to:
Ian D Maidment
Eastern & Area Coastal Office, St Martins Hospital, Littlebourne Road, Canterbury, Kent CT1 1AZ, UK; ian.maidment{at}nhs.net
Background: It has been estimated that medication error harms 12% of patients admitted to general hospitals. There has been no previous systematic review of the incidence, cause or type of medication error in mental healthcare services.
Methods: A systematic literature search for studies that examined the incidence or cause of medication error in one or more stage(s) of the medication-management process in the setting of a community or hospital-based mental healthcare service was undertaken. The results in the context of the design of the study and the denominator used were examined.
Results: All studies examined medication management processes, as opposed to outcomes. The reported rate of error was highest in studies that retrospectively examined drug charts, intermediate in those that relied on reporting by pharmacists to identify error and lowest in those that relied on organisational incident reporting systems. Only a few of the errors identified by the studies caused actual harm, mostly because they were detected and remedial action was taken before the patient received the drug. The focus of the research was on inpatients and prescriptions dispensed by mental health pharmacists.
Conclusion: Research about medication error in mental healthcare is limited. In particular, very little is known about the incidence of error in non-hospital settings or about the harm caused by it. Evidence is available from other sources that a substantial number of adverse drug events are caused by psychotropic drugs. Some of these are preventable and might probably, therefore, be due to medication error. On the basis of this and features of the organisation of mental healthcare that might predispose to medication error, priorities for future research are suggested.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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C. Haw, J. Stubbs, and G. Dickens An observational study of medication administration errors in old-age psychiatric inpatients Int. J. Qual. Health Care, August 1, 2007; 19(4): 210 - 216. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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