Rationale, Aims And Objectives: In this study, the aim was to investigate if an electronic prescribing system designed specifically to reduce errors would lead to fewer errors in prescribing medicines in a secondary care setting.
Method: The electronic system was compared with paper prescription charts on 16 intensive care patients to assess any change in the number of prescribing errors.
Results: The overall level of compliance with nationally accepted standards was significantly higher with the electronic system (91.67%) compared with the paper system (46.73%). Electronically generated prescriptions were found to contain significantly fewer deviations (28 in 329 prescriptions, 8.5%) than the written prescriptions (208 in 408 prescriptions, 51%).
Conclusion: Taking an interdisciplinary approach to work on the creation of a system designed to minimize the risk of error has resulted in a favoured system that significantly reduces the number of errors made.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2753.2009.01159.x | DOI Listing |
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