Abstract
Objective: To assess the type, frequency and potential clinical significance of medication-administration errors. Design: Prospective study using the observation technique as described by the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists but eliminating the disguised aspect. Setting: Medical intensive care unit (ICU) in a university hospital. Patients and participants: 2009 medication administration interventions by nurses. Interventions: Pharmacist-performed observation of preparation and administration of medication by nurses, comparison with the original medical order and comparison with the data available in the literature. Measurements and results: 132 (6.6 % of 2009 observed events) errors were detected. Their distribution is as follows: 41 dose errors, 29 wrong rate, 24 wrong preparation technique, 19 physicochemical incompatibility, 10 wrong administration technique and 9 wrong time errors. No fatal errors were observed, but 26 of 132 errors were potentially life-threatening and 55 potentially significant. Conclusion: According to this first observation-based study of medication administration errors in a European ICU, these errors were due to deficiencies in the overall organisation of the hospital medication track, in patient follow-up and in staff training.
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Received: 18 May 1998 Accepted: 4 December 1998
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Tissot, E., Cornette, C., Demoly, P. et al. Medication errors at the administration stage in an intensive care unit. Intensive Care Med 25, 353–359 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1007/s001340050857
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s001340050857