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Adverse drug events and medication errors: detection and classification methods.

Authors :
Morimoto T
Gandhi TK
Seger AC
Hsieh TC
Bates DW
Source :
Quality & safety in health care [Qual Saf Health Care] 2004 Aug; Vol. 13 (4), pp. 306-14.
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Investigating the incidence, type, and preventability of adverse drug events (ADEs) and medication errors is crucial to improving the quality of health care delivery. ADEs, potential ADEs, and medication errors can be collected by extraction from practice data, solicitation of incidents from health professionals, and patient surveys. Practice data include charts, laboratory, prescription data, and administrative databases, and can be reviewed manually or screened by computer systems to identify signals. Research nurses, pharmacists, or research assistants review these signals, and those that are likely to represent an ADE or medication error are presented to reviewers who independently categorize them into ADEs, potential ADEs, medication errors, or exclusions. These incidents are also classified according to preventability, ameliorability, disability, severity, stage, and responsible person. These classifications, as well as the initial selection of incidents, have been evaluated for agreement between reviewers and the level of agreement found ranged from satisfactory to excellent (kappa = 0.32-0.98). The method of ADE and medication error detection and classification described is feasible and has good reliability. It can be used in various clinical settings to measure and improve medication safety.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1475-3898
Volume :
13
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Quality & safety in health care
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
15289635
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/qhc.13.4.306