Article Text

Medication errors in paediatric care: a systematic review of epidemiology and an evaluation of evidence supporting reduction strategy recommendations
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  1. Marlene R Miller1,
  2. Karen A Robinson2,
  3. Lisa H Lubomski3,
  4. Michael L Rinke1,
  5. Peter J Pronovost3
  1. 1Department of Pediatrics, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
  2. 2Division of Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
  3. 3Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
  1. Correspondence to:
 Dr Marlene R Miller
 Director of Quality and Safety Initiatives, Johns Hopkins Children’s Center, CMSC 2-125, 600 N Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21287, USA; mmille21{at}jhmi.edu

Abstract

Background: Although children are at the greatest risk for medication errors, little is known about the overall epidemiology of these errors, where the gaps are in our knowledge, and to what extent national medication error reduction strategies focus on children.

Objective: To synthesise peer reviewed knowledge on children’s medication errors and on recommendations to improve paediatric medication safety by a systematic literature review.

Data sources: PubMed, Embase and Cinahl from 1 January 2000 to 30 April 2005, and 11 national entities that have disseminated recommendations to improve medication safety.

Study selection: Inclusion criteria were peer reviewed original data in English language. Studies that did not separately report paediatric data were excluded.

Data extraction: Two reviewers screened articles for eligibility and for data extraction, and screened all national medication error reduction strategies for relevance to children.

Data synthesis: From 358 articles identified, 31 were included for data extraction. The definition of medication error was non-uniform across the studies. Dispensing and administering errors were the most poorly and non-uniformly evaluated. Overall, the distributional epidemiological estimates of the relative percentages of paediatric error types were: prescribing 3–37%, dispensing 5–58%, administering 72–75%, and documentation 17–21%. 26 unique recommendations for strategies to reduce medication errors were identified; none were based on paediatric evidence.

Conclusions: Medication errors occur across the entire spectrum of prescribing, dispensing, and administering, are common, and have a myriad of non-evidence based potential reduction strategies. Further research in this area needs a firmer standardisation for items such as dose ranges and definitions of medication errors, broader scope beyond inpatient prescribing errors, and prioritisation of implementation of medication error reduction strategies.

  • ADEs, adverse drug events
  • MAR, medication administration record
  • medication errors
  • paediatrics
  • epidemiology
  • ADEs, adverse drug events
  • MAR, medication administration record
  • medication errors
  • paediatrics
  • epidemiology

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