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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

A Comprehensive Analysis of Medication Errors on Antimicrobials in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Northern India

AUTHORS: Riya Sharma*, Shivani Juneja, Deepak Saini, Kulvir Singh

JASPI June 2024/ Volume 2/Issue 2

Copyright: © Author(s). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. 

April-June 30, 2024

Sharma RJuneja S, Saini D, Singh K.A Comprehensive Analysis of Medication Errors on Antimicrobials in a Tertiary Care Hospital of Northern India. JASPI. 2024;2(2)9-13 DOI: 10.62541/jaspi032

ABSTRACT

Background: Medication errors, resulting from incomplete understanding, pose significant risks to patient safety. Antimicrobial medication error is a global concern further exacerbated by underreporting. This study aims to determine the prevalence of antimicrobial medication errors at a tertiary care medical facility.

Methodology: A retrospective study was conducted over six months. Antimicrobial medication errors were analyzed and categorized as prescription, transcription, indenting, dispensing, and administration errors. A total of 208 antimicrobial medication errors were analyzed using the National Coordinating Council for Medication Error Reporting and Prevention (NCCMERP) risk index.

Results: Among 6,439 medication charts assessed, 558 (9%) medication errors were identified, with antimicrobial errors accounting for 208 (37.2%). Prescription errors were the most prevalent (61%), followed by transcription errors (16%) and administration errors (11%). Dispensing, indenting, and documentation errors occurred at rates of 8%, 2%, and 2%, respectively. The primary causes of errors were incorrect doses (47.2%) and frequencies (30%). Approximately 55.3% of antimicrobial medication errors were classified as Category C according to the NCCMERP risk assessment.

Conclusion: Prescription errors represent the majority of antimicrobial medication errors, underscoring the need for enhanced vigilance among consultant physicians during prescription writing and drug schedule checks.

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