Risk Factors Associated with Medication Administration Errors in Children: A Prospective Direct Observational Study of Paediatric Inpatients
Johanna I. Westbrook (),
Ling Li,
Amanda Woods,
Tim Badgery-Parker,
Virginia Mumford,
Alison Merchant,
Erin Fitzpatrick and
Magdalena Z. Raban
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Johanna I. Westbrook: Macquarie University
Ling Li: Macquarie University
Amanda Woods: Macquarie University
Tim Badgery-Parker: Macquarie University
Virginia Mumford: Macquarie University
Alison Merchant: Macquarie University
Erin Fitzpatrick: Macquarie University
Magdalena Z. Raban: Macquarie University
Drug Safety, 2024, vol. 47, issue 6, No 5, 545-556
Abstract:
Abstract Introduction Limited evidence exists regarding medication administration errors (MAEs) on general paediatric wards or associated risk factors exists. Objective The aim of this study was to identify nurse, medication, and work-environment factors associated with MAEs among paediatric inpatients. Methods This was a prospective, direct observational study of 298 nurses in a paediatric referral hospital in Sydney, Australia. Trained observers recorded details of 5137 doses prepared and administered to 1530 children between 07:00 h and 22:00 h on weekdays and weekends. Observation data were compared with medication charts to identify errors. Clinical errors, potential severity and actual harm were assessed. Nurse characteristics (e.g. age, sex, experience), medication type (route, high-risk medications, use of solvent/diluent), and work variables (e.g. time of administration, weekday/weekend, use of an electronic medication management system [eMM], presence of a parent/carer) were collected. Multivariable models assessed MAE risk factors for any error, errors by route, potentially serious errors, and errors involving high-risk medication or causing actual harm. Results Errors occurred in 37.0% (n = 1899; 95% confidence interval [CI] 35.7–38.3) of administrations, 25.8% (n = 489; 95% CI 23.8–27.9) of which were rated as potentially serious. Intravenous infusions and injections had high error rates (64.7% [n = 514], 95% CI 61.3–68.0; and 77.4% [n = 188], 95% CI 71.7–82.2, respectively). For intravenous injections, 59.7% (95% CI 53.4–65.6) had potentially serious errors. No nurse characteristics were associated with MAEs. Intravenous route, early morning and weekend administrations, patient age ≥ 11 years, oral medications requiring solvents/diluents and eMM use were all significant risk factors. MAEs causing actual harm were 45% lower using an eMM compared with paper charts. Conclusion Medication error prevention strategies should target intravenous administrations and not neglect older children in hospital. Attention to nurses’ work environments, including improved design and integration of medication technologies, is warranted.
Date: 2024
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DOI: 10.1007/s40264-024-01408-6
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