Determining Medication Errors in an Adult Intensive Care Unit

Author:

Castro Renata da Nóbrega Souza de1ORCID,Aguiar Lucas Barbosa de1ORCID,Volpe Cris Renata Grou2,Silva Calliandra Maria de Souza1ORCID,Silva Izabel Cristina Rodrigues da1ORCID,Stival Marina Morato1ORCID,Silva Everton Nunes da1ORCID,Meiners Micheline Marie Milward de Azevedo3ORCID,Schwerz Funghetto Silvana1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate Program in Health Sciences and Technologies, Faculty of Ceilandia, University of Brasília, Federal District, Brasília 72220-275, Brazil

2. Department of Nursing, Faculty of Ceilandia, University of Brasília, Federal District, Brasília 72220-275, Brazil

3. Department of Pharmacy, Faculty of Ceilandia, University of Brasília, Federal District, Brasília 72220-275, Brazil

Abstract

Introduction: Research addressing the costs of Medication errors (MEs) is still scarce despite issues related to patient safety having significant economic and health impacts, making it imperative to analyze the costs and adverse events related to MEs for a better patient, professional, and institutional safety. Aim: To identify the number of medication errors and verify whether this number was associated with increased hospitalization costs for patients in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU). Method: This retrospective cross-sectional cohort study evaluated secondary data from patients’ electronic medical records to compile variables, create a model, and survey hospitalization costs. The statistical analysis included calculating medication error rates, descriptive analysis, and simple and multivariate regression. Results: The omission error rate showed the highest number of errors per drug dose (59.8%) and total errors observed in the sample (55.31%), followed by the time error rate (26.97%; 24.95%). The omission error had the highest average when analyzing the entire hospitalization (170.40) and day of hospitalization (13.79). Hospitalization costs were significantly and positively correlated with scheduling errors, with an increase of BRL 121.92 (about USD $25.00) (95% CI 43.09; 200.74), and to prescription errors, with an increase of BRL 63.51 (about USD $3.00) (95% CI 29.93; 97.09). Conclusion: We observed an association between two types of medication errors and increased hospitalization costs in an adult ICU (scheduling and prescription errors).

Funder

Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior—Brasil

University of Brasília

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference37 articles.

1. World Health Organization (2017). Medication without Harm: Global Patient Safety Challenge on Medication Safety, WHO.

2. Preventable Adverse Drug Events Among Inpatients: A Systematic Review;Gates;Pediatrics,2018

3. Medication errors in prescription and administration in critically ill patients;Suclupe;J. Adv. Nurs.,2020

4. A study of medication errors during the prescription stage in the pediatric critical care services of a secondary-tertiary level public hospital;BMC Pediatr.,2020

5. Assunção-Costa, L., Sousa, I.C., Oliveira, M.R.A., Pinto, C.R., Machado, J.F.F., Valli, C.G., and de Souza, L.E.P.F. (2022). Drug administration errors in Latin America: A systematic review. PLoS ONE, 17.

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