AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted at a Regional Cancer Centre in South India to analyze prescription errors in cancer chemotherapy patients, focusing on omissions, brand name usage, abbreviations, and legibility.
  • Out of 1500 prescriptions analyzed, there were 4253 errors (283.5%), with the majority caused by missing patient information (47.1%) and brand name usage (22.5%), while potentially harmful errors constituted 11.7%.
  • The findings suggest that high patient volumes and prescriber inattention contribute to these errors, indicating a need for improved prescription design and prescriber education to enhance accuracy and safety.

Article Abstract

Objective: To estimate the frequency and type of prescription errors in patients receiving cancer chemotherapy.

Settings And Design: We conducted a cross-sectional study at the day care unit of the Regional Cancer Centre (RCC) of a tertiary care hospital in South India.

Materials And Methods: All prescriptions written during July to September 2013 for patients attending the out-patient department of the RCC to be treated at the day care center were included in this study. The prescriptions were analyzed for omission of standard information, usage of brand names, abbreviations and legibility. The errors were further classified into potentially harmful ones and not harmful based on the likelihood of resulting in harm to the patient. Descriptive analysis was performed to estimate the frequency of prescription errors and expressed as total number of errors and percentage.

Results: A total of 4253 prescribing errors were found in 1500 prescriptions (283.5%), of which 47.1% were due to omissions like name, age and diagnosis and 22.5% were due to usage of brand names. Abbreviations of pre-medications and anticancer drugs accounted for 29.2% of the errors. Potentially harmful errors that were likely to result in serious consequences to the patient were estimated to be 11.7%.

Conclusions: Most of the errors intercepted in our study are due to a high patient load and inattention of the prescribers to omissions in prescription. Redesigning prescription forms and sensitizing prescribers to the importance of writing prescriptions without errors may help in reducing errors to a large extent.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4419253PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0976-500X.155484DOI Listing

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