Medication Errors in HIV-Infected Hospitalized Patients: A Pharmacist's Impact

Author:

Eginger Kristin H1,Yarborough Laura L2,Inge Lisa DeVito3,Basile Sharon A4,Floresca Donald5,Aaronson Patrick M6

Affiliation:

1. Kristin H Eginger PharmD, PGY-2 Emergency Medicine Resident, Department of Pharmacy, Gaston Memorial Hospital, Gastonia, NC

2. Laura L Yarborough PharmD, Clinical Assistant Professor, College of Pharmacy, University of Florida, Jacksonville; Clinical Pharmacist, Internal Medicine, Department of Pharmacy, Shands Jacksonville Medical Center

3. Lisa DeVito Inge PharmD BCPS BCACP AAHIVE, Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Pharmacotherapy and Translational Research, College of Pharmacy, University of Florida, Jacksonville

4. Sharon A Basile PharmD, Clinical Assistant Professor, College of Pharmacy, University of Florida; Clinical Pharmacist, Internal Medicine, Department of Pharmacy, Shands Jacksonville Medical Center

5. Donald Floresca PharmD, Clinical Pharmacist, Department of Pharmacy, Shands Jacksonville Medical Center

6. Patrick M Aaronson PharmD, Clinical Assistant Professor, College of Pharmacy, University of Florida; Clinical Pharmacist, Emergency Medicine, Department of Pharmacy, Shands Jacksonville Medical Center

Abstract

BACKGROUND Treatment with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) decreases morbidity and mortality associated with HIV infection. Unfortunately, HAART medication errors are prevalent in hospitalized patients with HIV infection. Appropriate regimen administration and adherence are essential for treatment success. OBJECTIVE To assess the impact of pharmacist interventions on the rate of medication errors in HIV-infected hospitalized patients who had been prescribed HAART in the outpatient setting. METHODS Hospitalized patients aged 18 years or older receiving HAART and/or opportunistic infection (OI) prophylaxis were screened for inclusion. Data collection for each enrolled patient included demographic information, pertinent laboratory results, and inpatient and outpatient medication regimens. Patient medication profiles were reviewed within 72 hours of admission. HAART and/or OI prophylaxis errors were classified by type and frequency. Following the pharmacist intervention, prescribers' responses to each recommendation and the estimated time per intervention were recorded. RESULTS Eighty-six patients were included in this investigation and 210 HAART and OI prophylaxis errors were documented. Of patients receiving HAART and/or OI prophylaxis, 54.7% had at least 1 medication error on admission. An average of 2.4 errors per patient was identified. Dose omission (45.5%) was the most common error type among combined HAART and OI prophylaxis regimens, followed by incorrect regimen (17.1%) and incorrect dose (15.1%). Prescribers accepted 90% of pharmacist recommendations. A pharmacist was able to amend 94.7% of correctable HAART errors, as well as 89.9% of correctable combined HAART and OI prophylaxis errors. An estimated 18.5 minutes of pharmacist time were spent per patient requiring an intervention. CONCLUSIONS A clinical pharmacist's targeted review of outpatient-prescribed HAART and/or OI primary prophylaxis regimens of hospitalized HIV-infected patients can reduce most medication errors during hospitalization.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical)

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