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A cross-sectional study: medication safety among cancer in-patients in tertiary care hospitals in KPK, Pakistan

BACKGROUND: Medication safety in cancer patients receiving complex medication regimens is an important problem in various settings. Medication related events, interceptions and interventions are not well described in this area. We intended to study incidence, types, settings and stages involved, roo...

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Autores principales: Azim, Marium, Khan, Ahmad, Khan, Tahir Mehmood, Kamran, Mohammad
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6699127/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31426786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-019-4420-7
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author Azim, Marium
Khan, Ahmad
Khan, Tahir Mehmood
Kamran, Mohammad
author_facet Azim, Marium
Khan, Ahmad
Khan, Tahir Mehmood
Kamran, Mohammad
author_sort Azim, Marium
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Medication safety in cancer patients receiving complex medication regimens is an important problem in various settings. Medication related events, interceptions and interventions are not well described in this area. We intended to study incidence, types, settings and stages involved, root cause analysis, medication classes involved and the level of harm cause by medication errors in two hospitals providing oncology services comparatively. The severity of incidents and interventions are studied. METHODS: It was a prospective cross sectional study among cancer in-patients of two tertiary care hospitals of KPK. Scale by NCC-MERP was used for evaluation of all medication related incidents. The data obtained was analyzed by IBM SPSS statistics 22 with 95% confidence interval and used the same for other descriptive statistics. RESULTS: All medication orders were reviewed at both sites (Computerized Prescription Order Entry and HWP systems). Potential ADEs incidence was found high at site 2 (97.5%) while medication errors without harm was high at site 1 (97.5%). Most events occur at prescribing level 87.6 and 81.7% at both sites 1 and 2. Types highly reported involved improper dose 31.4 and 15.5%, monitoring error 14.6 and 15.2% at site 1 and 2. Medications involved in these incidents were antibiotics 44 and 12.7%, antiemetic 7.5 and 15.8% and antineoplastic 2.9 and 9.4% at site 1 and 2. Severity of 3.6 and 36.5% incidents had potential to cause harm at site 1 and 2. Root causes were human factors 62.6 and 72.3%, drug selection 33.6 and 38.8%, and dose selection 39.6 and 15.3% at sites 1 and 2. Contributing factors including staff training 33.6 and 24.3%, system for covering patient care 14.9 and 36.6%, communication system 2.4 and 20.3%, interruptions 9.7 and 7.3% and others 78.8 and 68.6% were highly reported. Preventability of medication errors was 99% at both sites. Intervention was taken in 90.5% events at site 1 (CPOE system) while the incidence lowest at site 2 (HWP system). CONCLUSION: Medication related events are high among cancer in-patients at the site lacking updated electronic system for medication prescribing. Proper training about medication safety, reporting and interventions are required.
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spelling pubmed-66991272019-08-26 A cross-sectional study: medication safety among cancer in-patients in tertiary care hospitals in KPK, Pakistan Azim, Marium Khan, Ahmad Khan, Tahir Mehmood Kamran, Mohammad BMC Health Serv Res Research Article BACKGROUND: Medication safety in cancer patients receiving complex medication regimens is an important problem in various settings. Medication related events, interceptions and interventions are not well described in this area. We intended to study incidence, types, settings and stages involved, root cause analysis, medication classes involved and the level of harm cause by medication errors in two hospitals providing oncology services comparatively. The severity of incidents and interventions are studied. METHODS: It was a prospective cross sectional study among cancer in-patients of two tertiary care hospitals of KPK. Scale by NCC-MERP was used for evaluation of all medication related incidents. The data obtained was analyzed by IBM SPSS statistics 22 with 95% confidence interval and used the same for other descriptive statistics. RESULTS: All medication orders were reviewed at both sites (Computerized Prescription Order Entry and HWP systems). Potential ADEs incidence was found high at site 2 (97.5%) while medication errors without harm was high at site 1 (97.5%). Most events occur at prescribing level 87.6 and 81.7% at both sites 1 and 2. Types highly reported involved improper dose 31.4 and 15.5%, monitoring error 14.6 and 15.2% at site 1 and 2. Medications involved in these incidents were antibiotics 44 and 12.7%, antiemetic 7.5 and 15.8% and antineoplastic 2.9 and 9.4% at site 1 and 2. Severity of 3.6 and 36.5% incidents had potential to cause harm at site 1 and 2. Root causes were human factors 62.6 and 72.3%, drug selection 33.6 and 38.8%, and dose selection 39.6 and 15.3% at sites 1 and 2. Contributing factors including staff training 33.6 and 24.3%, system for covering patient care 14.9 and 36.6%, communication system 2.4 and 20.3%, interruptions 9.7 and 7.3% and others 78.8 and 68.6% were highly reported. Preventability of medication errors was 99% at both sites. Intervention was taken in 90.5% events at site 1 (CPOE system) while the incidence lowest at site 2 (HWP system). CONCLUSION: Medication related events are high among cancer in-patients at the site lacking updated electronic system for medication prescribing. Proper training about medication safety, reporting and interventions are required. BioMed Central 2019-08-19 /pmc/articles/PMC6699127/ /pubmed/31426786 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-019-4420-7 Text en © The Author(s). 2019 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Azim, Marium
Khan, Ahmad
Khan, Tahir Mehmood
Kamran, Mohammad
A cross-sectional study: medication safety among cancer in-patients in tertiary care hospitals in KPK, Pakistan
title A cross-sectional study: medication safety among cancer in-patients in tertiary care hospitals in KPK, Pakistan
title_full A cross-sectional study: medication safety among cancer in-patients in tertiary care hospitals in KPK, Pakistan
title_fullStr A cross-sectional study: medication safety among cancer in-patients in tertiary care hospitals in KPK, Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed A cross-sectional study: medication safety among cancer in-patients in tertiary care hospitals in KPK, Pakistan
title_short A cross-sectional study: medication safety among cancer in-patients in tertiary care hospitals in KPK, Pakistan
title_sort cross-sectional study: medication safety among cancer in-patients in tertiary care hospitals in kpk, pakistan
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6699127/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31426786
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-019-4420-7
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