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PEDIATRICS Vol. 112 No. 2 August 2003, pp. 431-436


POLICY STATEMENT

Prevention of Medication Errors in the Pediatric Inpatient Setting

Committee on Drugs and Committee on Hospital Care


    ABSTRACT
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 BACKGROUND
 RECOMMENDATIONS
 Committee on Drugs, 2001-2002
 Staff
 Committee on Hospital Care,...
 Liaisons
 Consultant
 Staff
 REFERENCES
 
Although medication errors in hospitals are common, medication errors that result in death or serious injury occur rarely. Even before the Institute of Medicine reported on medical errors in 1999, the American Academy of Pediatrics and its members had been committed to improving the health care system to provide the best and safest health care for infants, children, adolescents, and young adults. This commitment includes designing health care systems to prevent errors and emphasizing the pediatrician’s role in this system. Human and device errors can lead to preventable morbidity and mortality. National and state legislative actions have heightened public awareness of these events. All involved persons, beginning with the physician and including every member of the health care team, must be better educated about and engaged in the several steps recommended to decrease these errors. The safe administration of medications to hospitalized infants and children requires additional specific safeguards that are above and beyond those for adult patients. Pediatricians should help hospitals develop effective programs for safely providing medications, reporting medication errors, and creating an environment of medication safety for all hospitalized pediatric patients.


Abbreviations: IOM, Institute of Medicine • ADE, adverse drug event • USP, US Pharmacopeia • CPOE, computerized physician or prescriber order entry • AAP, American Academy of Pediatrics • JCAHO, Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations


    BACKGROUND
 TOP
 ABSTRACT
 BACKGROUND
 RECOMMENDATIONS
 Committee on Drugs, 2001-2002
 Staff
 Committee on Hospital Care,...
 Liaisons
 Consultant
 Staff
 REFERENCES
 
Hospitalized infants and children are subject to advantages and risks of inpatient care. Included in most medical and surgical treatment regimens for hospitalized pediatric patients is administration of medications that may be associated with undesirable as well as therapeutic effects. The Institute of Medicine (IOM)1 defines an adverse drug event (ADE) as an injury resulting from medical intervention related to a drug, which can be attributable to preventable and nonpreventable causes. Of these, adverse reactions to medications include those that are usually unpredictable, such as idiosyncratic or unexpected allergic responses, and those that are predictable, such as adverse effects or toxic reactions related to the inherent pharmacologic properties of the drug. In general, the number and severity of adverse medication reactions are directly related to the number of drugs administered to hospitalized patients.24 In contrast to these nonpreventable adverse drug reactions, medication errors occur as a result of human mistakes or system flaws. A medication error is any preventable event that occurs in the process of ordering or delivering a medication, regardless of whether an injury occurred or the potential for injury was present.1,57 The distinction between the 2 is salient; an allergic reaction to a medication can be an adverse reaction if there is no history of patient allergy, yet can be a medication error in that same case of allergic reaction if the patient did have a documented history of allergies but that medical information was not available, not consulted, or overlooked.1 Even more important to emphasize is that medication errors can occur in the absence of injury to the patient.

Providing drug treatment in the hospital setting requires that a series of actions be performed correctly by several members of the health care team, such as the physician, the unit clerk, the hospital pharmacist, and the nurse. Errors are possible at any step of the process, from medication selection and ordering, to order transcription, to drug formulation, to drug dispensing, to drug administration. For adults, the reported incidence of errors in treatment with medications ranges from 1% to 30% of all hospital admissions,8 or 5% of orders written.5 In pediatrics, however, this number has been reported to be as high as 1 in 6.4 orders.9 A 1995–1999 study by the US Pharmacopeia (USP) Medication Errors Reporting Program demonstrated a significantly increased rate of medication error resulting in harm or death in pediatric patients (31%), compared with adults (13%).10 In a more recent study, ADEs occurred at a similar rate between pediatric (5.7%) and adult patients (5.3%). However, potential ADEs—those errors not causing harm—occurred in pediatric patients 3 times more often than in adults.11 In adult studies, antimicrobial agents, analgesic agents, and cardiovascular drugs are most often associated with reported errors.2,3,12 Yet for pediatrics, intravenous fluids are the most commonly cited product involved in medication errors reported to the USP.10 In pediatric and adult populations, the most commonly reported errors include the following: inappropriate medication for the condition being treated; incorrect dosage or frequency of administration of medication; wrong route of administration; failure to recognize drug-drug or drug-herbal/medicinal/dietary product interactions; lack of monitoring for drug adverse effects; "missed/late dose errors" with delayed drug administration; and inadequate communication between the physician, other members of the health care team, the parent or caregiver, and the patient.5,10 For pediatrics, incorrect dosing is the most commonly reported error, including computation errors of dosage and dosing interval.10,11,13,14 Many drugs lack formal US Food and Drug Administration licensing for pediatric indications and dosing guidelines,15 which increases the risk of these errors and accounts for the significant difference in the frequency of these errors in pediatrics (47% of errors) as compared with adults (28%).10 In teaching hospitals, prescribing errors decrease with each year of training; the error rate for attending physicians, however, is exceeded only by that of first-year residents.12 Targeted education can decrease the rates of errors, but long-term retention of information is not ensured.16 Computerized physician or prescriber order entry (CPOE), standardized order forms, and alert systems have all demonstrated success in decreasing errors.17,18 These systems can mandate attending physician cosignature for attempted overrides of the embedded templates in the system by residents.19 For example, alert systems can assist prescribers by triggering an alert when a patient on digoxin has low potassium. In one study, such a system triggered alerts in 64 per 1000 admissions, influencing order changes that were directly attributable to the system in 29 per 1000 admissions.8 Templates or standardized order forms can also aid in drug choice or delivery method.19 Yet complete reliance on computer systems is not fail-safe; one third of software systems fail to trigger an alert for clinically significant drug-drug interactions.20 Fortunately, fewer than 2% of erroneous medication orders reach the patient.9

Medication errors produce a variety of problems for patients, ranging from minor discomfort to substantial morbidity that may prolong hospitalization or lead to death.2,4,10,21 The 1999 IOM report implicates medication errors, at least in part, as a direct cause of up to 98 000 patient deaths annually.1 Drug errors associated with morbidity and mortality increase inpatient health care costs by an estimated $4700 per hospital admission, or approximately $2.8 million annually for a 700-bed teaching hospital.1 In addition, time spent by the health care team tracking errors, such as missed doses, can have an effect on time available for direct patient care. In a study of medical liability suits filed from January 1985 through December 2001, the Physician Insurers Association of America found medication error was the fifth most common misadventure for pediatricians. More than 30% of these cases resulted in a paid claim, with total indemnity at $14.7 million.22 The economic burden for all areas of health care from drug misadventures exceeds $100 billion annually in the United States alone.23

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) is committed to decreasing medication errors in the treatment of children24 and to the development of systems designed to identify and learn from errors.25 Children vary in weight, body surface area, and organ system maturity, which affect their ability to metabolize and excrete medications. In addition, there are few standardized dosing regimens for children, with most medication dosing requiring body weight calculations. The causes of drug errors are multifactorial. Therefore, medication error improvement programs must focus on system improvements and team communication. The top 10 causes of pediatric errors identified by cause for the 2-year period ending December 31, 2000, by the USP are performance deficit, procedure or protocol not followed, miscommunication, inaccurate or omitted transcription, improper documentation, drug distribution system error, knowledge deficit, calculation error, computer entry error, and lack of system safeguards.10 Institutions caring for children must develop multidisciplinary programs involving active participation by physicians, nurses, pharmacists, laboratory staff, and information system specialists to significantly decrease medication errors. Involvement of the family in all areas of the medication program is also of value.7,2628 These programs should be an integral part of the institutional quality assurance and quality performance activities and, when possible, incorporate computer-assisted drug ordering and monitoring. They should also be tied to laboratory and adverse event reporting systems. The AAP recognizes and supports the extensive studies and policies developed over the past decade by other organizations using nonpunitive reporting systems to decrease or eliminate drug administration errors.2932 Several of their recommendations and others are summarized below in a comprehensive approach to decreasing medication errors in the hospitalized pediatric patient.

Physicians who care for children in the hospital setting are encouraged to promote, if not actively develop, programs to decrease medication errors in their institutions as part of a more encompassing patient safety program.25 Of particular importance to pediatric patients are weight calculations, emotional and biological developmental issues including communication ability, and patient and family involvement throughout the process. It is incumbent on hospitals to include such programs in their policies and procedures to decrease the risk of prolonged hospitalization and attendant errors associated with drug treatment. The costs for such system overhauls is significant, but a change is now being demanded by legislators and families.33 The business community, the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission,34 the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality,35 and the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO)7 acknowledge the need for system overhaul.


    RECOMMENDATIONS
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 BACKGROUND
 RECOMMENDATIONS
 Committee on Drugs, 2001-2002
 Staff
 Committee on Hospital Care,...
 Liaisons
 Consultant
 Staff
 REFERENCES
 
The following statements are actions and/or guidelines for policy, education, and communication to assist in decreasing the rate of pediatric medication errors. Recommendations uniquely pertinent to children are noted with an asterisk (*), and more general recommendations are noted with a bullet (•).

Hospitalwide System Actions and Guidelines

Prescriber Actions and Guidelines
Physician prescriptions and drug orders are a means of communicating, so they must be legible, clear, and unambiguous. The following steps help ensure that medication orders communicate safely and effectively.

Prescriber Education and Communication

Pharmacy Actions and Guidelines

Pharmacy Education and Communication

Nursing Actions and Guidelines

Nursing Education and Communication

Patients and Families


    Committee on Drugs, 2001–2002
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 Staff
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Richard L. Gorman, MD, Chairperson

Brian A. Bates, MD

William E. Benitz, MD

David J. Burchfield, MD

Lynne Maxwell, MD

John C. Ring, MD

Richard P. Walls, MD, PhD

Philip D. Walson, MD


    Staff
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 BACKGROUND
 RECOMMENDATIONS
 Committee on Drugs, 2001-2002
 Staff
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 Staff
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Raymond J. Koteras, MHA


    Committee on Hospital Care, 2002–2003
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 BACKGROUND
 RECOMMENDATIONS
 Committee on Drugs, 2001-2002
 Staff
 Committee on Hospital Care,...
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 Consultant
 Staff
 REFERENCES
 
John M. Neff, MD, Chairperson

Jerrold M. Eichner, MD

David R. Hardy, MD

Jack Percelay, MD, MPH

Ted Sigrest, MD

*Erin R. Stucky, MD


    Liaisons
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 BACKGROUND
 RECOMMENDATIONS
 Committee on Drugs, 2001-2002
 Staff
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Susan Dull, RN, MSN, MBA

National Association of Children’s Hospitals and Related Institutions

Mary T. Perkins, RN, DNSC

American Hospital Association

Jerriann M. Wilson, CCLS, MEd

Child Life Council


    Consultant
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 BACKGROUND
 RECOMMENDATIONS
 Committee on Drugs, 2001-2002
 Staff
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 Staff
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Timothy Corden, MD


    Staff
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 Staff
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Stephanie M. Mucha, MPH


    FOOTNOTES
 
Organizational Principles to Guide and Define the Child Health Care System and/or Improve the Health of All Children

All policy statements from the American Academy of Pediatrics automatically expire 5 years after publication unless reaffirmed, revised, or retired at or before that time.

* Lead author Back


    REFERENCES
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 BACKGROUND
 RECOMMENDATIONS
 Committee on Drugs, 2001-2002
 Staff
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 Staff
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PEDIATRICS (ISSN 1098-4275). ©2003 by the American Academy of Pediatrics

Statement of reaffirmation:

AAP Publications Reaffirmed, January 2007
Pediatrics 119: 1031-1031. [Full Text]

The following policy statement has been revised:

Prevention of Medication Errors in the Pediatric Inpatient Setting

Pediatrics 102: 428-430. [Full Text]



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