Assessment of A new Strategy to Prevent Prescribing Errors Involving COVID-19 Patients in Community Pharmacies

Author:

Abdel-Qader Derar H.1,Al Meslamani Ahmad Z.2ORCID,Albassam Abdullah3,Al Mazrouei Nadia4,El-Shara Asma A.5,El Sharu Husam6,Ebaed Samah Bahy Mohammed7,Ibrahim Osama Mohamed48

Affiliation:

1. University of Petra, Amman, Jordan

2. AAU Health and Biomedical Research Center, Al Ain University, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

3. Kuwait University, Kuwait

4. University of Sharjah, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates

5. Philadelphia University, Amman, Jordan

6. Indiana University Center for Health Innovation and Implementation Science, Indianapolis, IN, USA

7. Benha University, Benha, Egypt

8. Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt

Abstract

Background: Because COVID-19 patients are vulnerable to prescribing errors (PEs) and adverse drug events, designing and implementing a new approach to prevent prescribing errors (PEs) involving COVID-19 patients has become a priority in pharmacotherapy research. Objectives: To investigate whether using WhatsApp to deliver prescribing error (PE)-related clinical scenarios to community pharmacists could enhance their ability to detect PEs and conduct successful pharmaceutical interventions (PIs). Methods: In this study, 110 community pharmacies were recruited from different regions across Jordan and equally allocated to 2 groups. Over the course of 4 weeks, WhatsApp was used to send PEs-related clinical case scenarios to the active group. The second group was controlled with no clinical scenarios. After completion of the 4-week phase, pharmacists from both groups were asked to document PEs in COVID-19 patients and their interventions using a data-collection form. Results: The incidence of PEs in COVID-19 patients documented in the active group (18.54%) was higher than that reported in the control group (3.09%) ( P = .001). Of the 6598 and 968 PIs conducted by participants working in the active and control group pharmacies, 6013 (91.13%) and 651 (67.25%) were accepted, respectively. The proportions of wrong drug (contraindication), wrong drug (unnecessary drug prescribed/no proof of its benefits), and omission of a drug between the active and control groups were 15.30% versus 7.21% ( P = .001), 11.85% versus 6.29% ( P = .03), and 17.78% versus 10.50% (0.01), respectively. Additionally, the proportions of lethal, serious, and significant errors were 0.74% versus 0.35% ( P = .04), 10.52% versus 2.57% (0.002), and 47.88% versus 9.57% (0.001), respectively. Addition of drug therapy interventions (AOR = 0.62; 95% CI, 0.21-0.84) and errors with significant clinical seriousness (AOR = 0.32; 95% CI, 0.16-0.64). Conclusions PEs involving COVID-19 patients in community settings are common and clinically significant. The intervention assessed in this study could be promising for designing a feasible and time-efficient interventional tool to encourage pharmacists’ involvement in identifying and correcting PEs in light of COVID-19.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology,Pharmacy

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