Imperial College NHS Healthcare Trust
Paediatric Emergency Department
Professor of Surgery

Author Of 1 Presentation

MEDICATION ERRORS DURING SIMULATED PAEDIATRIC RESUSCITATIONS: A PROSPECTIVE, OBSERVATIONAL HUMAN RELIABILITY ANALYSIS

Room
Exhibition Area
Date
19.06.2019
Session Time
10:00 - 16:00
Session Name
POSTER VIEWING 06: Patient quality and safety
Presentation Time
07:00 - 18:00
Duration
1 Minute

Abstract

Background

Medication errors during paediatric resuscitation are thought to be common. However, there is little evidence about the individual process steps that contribute to such medication errors in this context.

Objectives

Todescribe the incidence, nature and severity of medication errors in simulated paediatric resuscitations, and to employ human reliability analysis to understand the contributory role of individual process step discrepancies to these errors.

Methods

We conducted a prospective observational study of simulated resuscitations subject to video micro-analysis, identification of medication errors, severity assessment and human reliability analysis in a large English teaching hospital. Fifteen resuscitation teams of two doctors and two nurses each conducted one of two simulated paediatric resuscitation scenarios.

Results

At least one medication error was observed in every simulated case, and a large magnitude or clinically significant error in 11 of 15 cases. Medication errors were observed in 29% of 180 simulated medication administrations, 40% of which considered to be moderate or severe. These errors were the result of 884 observed discrepancies at a number of steps in the drug ordering, preparation and administration stages of medication use, 8% of which made a major contribution to a resultant medication error.Most errors were introduced by discrepancies during drug preparation and administration.

Conclusion

Medication errors were common with a considerable proportion likely to result in patient harm. There is an urgent need to optimise existing systems and to commission research into new approaches to increase the reliability of human interactions during administration of medication in the paediatric emergency setting.

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