Mapping the prevalence and nature of drug related problems among hospitalised children in the United Kingdom: a systematic review.

BMC Pediatr

Centre for Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety, Division of Pharmacy and Optometry, School of Health Sciences, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester, M13 9PT, UK.

Published: December 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Medication usage issues are a major patient safety concern, especially for hospitalized children in the UK who are at a higher risk of experiencing medication-related harm compared to adults.
  • A review of studies from January 1999 to April 2019 found that 25.6% of hospitalized children experienced adverse drug reactions, with a significant proportion requiring medication withdrawal, alongside prevalent prescribing (6.5%) and administration errors (16.3%).
  • Errors in medication reconciliation during hospital admission and discharge affected 43% of patients, with a large portion (70.3%) classified as potentially harmful, highlighting the need for interventions to enhance medication safety.

Article Abstract

Background: Problems arising from medicines usage are recognised as a key patient safety issue. Children are a particular concern, given that they are more likely than adults to experience medication-related harm. While previous reviews have provided an estimate of prevalence in this population, these predate recent developments in the delivery of paediatric care. Hence, there is a need for an updated, focussed and critical review of the prevalence and nature of drug-related problems in hospitalised children in the UK, in order to support the development and targeting of interventions to improve medication safety.

Methods: Nine electronic databases (Medline, Embase, CINAHL, PsychInfo, IPA, Scopus, HMIC, BNI, The Cochrane library and clinical trial databases) were searched from January 1999 to April 2019. Studies were included if they were based in the UK, reported on the frequency of adverse drug reactions (ADRs), adverse drug events (ADEs) or medication errors (MEs) affecting hospitalised children. Quality appraisal of the studies was also conducted.

Results: In all, 26 studies were included. There were no studies which specifically reported prevalence of adverse drug events. Two adverse drug reaction studies reported a median prevalence of 25.6% of patients (IQR 21.8-29.9); 79.2% of reactions warranted withdrawal of medication. Sixteen studies reported on prescribing errors (median prevalence 6.5%; IQR 4.7-13.3); of which, the median rate of dose prescribing errors was 11.1% (IQR 2.9-13). Ten studies reported on administration errors with a median prevalence of 16.3% (IQR 6.4-23). Administration technique errors represented 53% (IQR 52.7-67.4) of these errors. Errors detected during medicines reconciliation at hospital admission affected 43% of patients, 23% (Range 20.1-46) of prescribed medication; 70.3% (Range 50-78) were classified as potentially harmful. Medication errors detected during reconciliation on discharge from hospital affected 33% of patients and 19.7% of medicines, with 22% considered potentially harmful. No studies examined the prevalence of monitoring or dispensing errors.

Conclusions: Children are commonly affected by drug-related problems throughout their hospital journey. Given the high prevalence and risk of patient harm,, there is a need for a deeper theoretical understanding of paediatric medication systems to enable more effective interventions to be developed to improve patient safety.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6905106PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12887-019-1875-yDOI Listing

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