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MEDICATION ERROR IN ANAESTHESIA. Andrew Smith, Lancaster, UK on behalf of the ESA/EBA Task Force Patient Safety. Adverse drug event ADE “ An adverse drug event, injuries resulting from medical intervention related to a drug, includes both appropriate and inappropriate use of drugs."
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MEDICATION ERROR IN ANAESTHESIA Andrew Smith, Lancaster, UK on behalf of the ESA/EBA Task Force Patient Safety
Adverse drug event ADE “An adverse drug event, injuries resulting from medical intervention related to a drug, includes both appropriate and inappropriate use of drugs." [Carlton G et al. Medication-related errors: a literature review of incidence and antecendents. Annu Rev Nurs Res 2006] Synonyms in the literature Drug misadventures Drug related problems Drug related incident The term comprises both Adverse drug reactions Medication errors DEFINITIONS
Adverse drug reaction ADR “An adverse drug reaction is a response to a drug which is noxious and unintendedand which occurs in man at doses normally used for prophylaxis, diagnosis or therapy of disease, or for modification of physiological function.” [World Health Organization WHO, 2003] Medication error "A medication error is any preventable event that may cause or lead to inappropriate medication use or patient harm while the medication is in the control of the health care professional, patient, or consumer. Such events may be related to professional practice, health care products, procedures, and systems, including prescribing; order communication; product labeling, packaging, and nomenclature; compounding; dispensing; distribution; administration; education; monitoring; And use." [National Coordinating Counsel for Medication Error Reporting and Preventing NCC MERP, June 2008] DEFINITIONS
DEFINITIONS Side-effect: a known effect, other than that primarily intended, relating to the pharmacological properties of a medication • e.g. opiate analgesia often causes nausea Adverse reaction: unexpected harm arising from a justified action where the correct process was followed for the context in which the event occurred • e.g. an unexpected allergic reaction in a patient taking amedication for the first time
WHAT SORT OF ERRORS CAN OCCUR? • Wrong drug • Wrong patient • Wrong route • Wrong dose
ERROR PRONE PRESCRIPTIONS • Illegible handwriting • Using misleading decimal places1.0 mg instead of 1 mg.1 mg instead of 0.1 mg • Use of abbreviations2x (means 2 tablets or 2x daily ???) • Recommendations: • Avoid trailing zerose.g. write 1 not 1.0 • Use leading zerose.g. write 0.1 not .1 • Know accepted local terminology • Write neatly, print if necessary
HOW CAN PRESCRIBING GO WRONG? • Inadequate knowledge about drug indications and contraindications • Not considering individual patient factors, such as allergies, pregnancy, co-morbidities, other medications • Wrong patient, wrong dose, wrong time, wrong drug, wrong route • Inadequate communication (written, verbal) • Documentation - illegible, incomplete, ambiguous • Mathematical error when calculating dosage • Incorrect data entry when using computerized prescribing e.g. duplication, omission, wrong number World Health Organization WHO, Patient Safety Curriculum Guide
HOW CAN ADMINISTRATION GO WRONG? • Wrong patient • Wrong route • Wrong time • Wrong dose • Wrong drug • Omission, failure to administer • Inadequate documentation World Health Organization WHO, Patient Safety Curriculum Guide
WHICH PATIENTS ARE MOST AT RISK OF MEDICATION ERROR? • Patients on multiple medications • Patients with another condition, e.g. renal impairment, pregnancy • Patients who cannot communicate well • Patients who have more than one doctor • Patients who do not take an active role in their own medication use • Children and babies (dose calculations required) World Health Organization WHO, Patient Safety Curriculum Guide
IN WHAT SITUATIONS ARE STAFF MOST LIKELY TO CONTRIBUTE TO A MEDICATION ERROR? • Inexperience • Rushing, doing two things at once • Interruptions • Fatigue, boredom, being on “automatic pilot” leading to failure to check and double-check • Lack of checking and double checking (including two-person checking) habits • Poor teamwork and/or communication between colleagues • Reluctance to use memory aids World Health Organization WHO, Patient Safety Curriculum Guide
THE 5-R’S • Right Drug • Right Route • Right Time • Right Dose • Right Patient World Health Organization WHO, Patient Safety Curriculum Guide
PHASES OF DRUG DEVELOPMENT AND PRECLINICAL AND CLINICAL TRIALS
AT WHICH STEP IN THE MEDICATION PROCESS DO ERRORS OCCUR? Prescription(hand written) 39% Administration 38% Documentation 12% Dispensation 11% Bates et al., JAMA 1995, 274
“SOUND ALIKE – LOOK ALIKE” – Examples from Switzerland Sound alike and look alike drug names Generic name Trade name Clonidin Catapresan Clomipramin Anafranil Codein Codein Knoll Etodolac Lodin Cotrimazol Bactrim, Cotrim, Nopil Clotrimazol Canesten, Corisol http://www.patientensicherheit.ch/de/publikationen/Quick-Alerts.html
HOW FREQUENT IS MEDICATION ERROR IN ANAESTHESIA? Difficult to tell as many are not reported BUT Estimated frequencies are: 1 in 572 anaesthetics (Yamamoto J Anesth 2008; 248-52) 1 in 274 anaesthetics (Llewellyn Anaes Intens Care 2009; 37: 93) 1 in 133 anaesthetics (Webster Anaes Intens Care 2001; 29: 494) How many anaesthetics do you give every year?
WHAT ARE THE CONSEQUENCES OF DRUG ERROR? • Death is uncommon but what happens if.... • Atracurium is given instead of midazolam? • Cefuroxime is given instead of thiopentone? • Metoclopramide is given instead of succinylcholine? • Bupivacaine is given intravenously instead of epidurally? • Fentanyl is given intrathecally instead of intravenously? • Loss of expected effect and possible physical or psychological harm to the patient
PREVENTING MEDICATION ERROR: KEY STRATEGIES • Standardised preparations and concentrations of drugs and infusions • Avoid boxes and ampoules of different drugs which look alike • Label syringes • Take care with predisposing factors • - Organisation and tidiness of work spaces • - Human factors such as fatigue and haste • Check drug during preparation and before administration with two people • ‘High-tech’ solutions: bar code systems and computerised prescribing
TWO-PERSON CHECKING Ask the right question: ‘What drug is this?’ not ‘This is X, isn’t it?’ - So both people have to actively read and check the label
RECOMMENDATIONS • Use generic names where appropriate • Tailor your prescribing for each patient • Learn and practise thorough medication history taking • Know which medications are high-risk and take precautions • Be very familiar with the medication you prescribe and/or dispense • Use memory aids • Remember the 5 R’s when prescribing and administering • Communicate clearly • Develop checking habits • Encourage patients to be actively involved in the process • Report and learn from medication errors World Health Organization WHO, Patient Safety Curriculum Guide
MORE INFORMATION • Anaesthesia Patient Safety Foundation video on medication safety in the OR: • http://www.apsf.org/resources_video2.php • WHO safety curriculum(pdf included in this Starter Pack) • Vincent C. Essentials of Patien Safety, pages 30-34 (pdf included in this Starter Pack)