A mixed method study of the merits of e-prescribing drug alerts in primary care

J Gen Intern Med. 2008 Apr;23(4):442-6. doi: 10.1007/s11606-008-0505-4.

Abstract

Objectives: The objective of this paper was to describe primary care prescribers' perspectives on electronic prescribing drug alerts at the point of prescribing.

Design: We used a mixed-method study which included clinician surveys (web-based and paper) and focus groups with prescribers and staff.

Participants: Prescribers (n = 157) working in one of 64 practices using 1 of 6 e-prescribing technologies in 6 US states completed the quantitative survey and 276 prescribers and staff participated in focus groups.

Measurements: The study measures self-reported frequency of overriding of drug alerts; open-ended responses to: "What do you think of the drug alerts your software generates for you?"

Results: More than 40% of prescribers indicated they override drug-drug interactions most of the time or always (range by e-prescribing system, 25% to 50%). Participants indicated that the software and the interaction alerts were beneficial to patient safety and valued seeing drug-drug interactions for medications prescribed by others. However, they noted that alerts are too sensitive and often unnecessary. Participant suggestions included: (1) run drug alerts on an active medication list and (2) allow prescribers to set the threshold for severity of alerts.

Conclusions: Primary care prescribers recognize the patient safety value of drug prescribing alerts embedded within electronic prescribing software. Improvements to increase specificity and reduce alert overload are needed.

MeSH terms

  • Attitude to Computers*
  • Clinical Pharmacy Information Systems*
  • Data Collection
  • Drug Therapy, Computer-Assisted*
  • Female
  • Focus Groups
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Medical Order Entry Systems
  • Medication Errors / prevention & control*
  • Nurse Practitioners
  • Physician Assistants
  • Physicians, Family
  • Polypharmacy
  • Primary Health Care
  • Reminder Systems*
  • United States