The effect of computerized physician order entry and decision support system on medication errors in the neonatal ward: Experiences from an Iranian teaching hospital
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Abstract
Medication dosing errors are frequent in neonatal wards. In an Iranian neonatal ward, a 7.5 months study was designed in three periods to compare the effect of Computerized Physician Order Entry (CPOE) without and with decision support functionalities in reducing non-intercepted medication dosing errors in antibiotics and anticonvulsants. Before intervention (Period 1), error rate was 53%, which did not significantly change after the implementation of CPOE without decision support (Period 2). However, errors were significantly reduced to 34% after that the decision support was added to the CPOE (Period 3; P<0.001). Dose errors were more often intercepted than frequency errors. Over-dose was the most frequent type of medication errors and curtailed-interval was the least. Transcription errors did not reduce after the CPOE implementation. Physicians ignored alerts when they could not understand why they appeared. A suggestion is to add explanations about these reasons to increase physicians' compliance with the system's recommendations. ط¢آ© 2009 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.
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antibiotic agent, anticonvulsive agent, antibiotic therapy, anticonvulsant therapy, article, clinical practice, computerized provider order entry, decision support system, drug overdose, health care management, human, infection, medical documentation, medication error, newborn, patient safety, pediatric ward, prescription, seizure, Anti-Bacterial Agents, Anticonvulsants, Clinical Pharmacy Information Systems, Decision Support Systems, Clinical, Female, Hospitals, Teaching, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Iran, Male, Medical Order Entry Systems, Medication Errors, Medication Systems, Hospital, Neonatology, User-Computer Interface