Abushaiqa Mohammed E, Zaran Frank K, Bach David S, Smolarek Richard T, Farber Margo S
Medication Department, Medical Supply, General Administration of Medical Services Ministry of Interior, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Am J Health Syst Pharm. 2007 Jun 1;64(11):1170-3. doi: 10.2146/ajhp060173.
Educational interventions to reduce the use of abbreviations and dosage designations that were deemed unsafe at a level 1 trauma center are described.
Strategies to reduce the use of unsafe abbreviations at Detroit Receiving Hospital were studied. Six abbreviations and dosage designations were deemed as unsafe by the site's medication-use and patient medical safety committees: (1) U for units, (2) microg for microgram, (3) TIW for three times a week, (4) the degree symbol for hour, (5) trailing zeros after a decimal point, and (6) the lack of leading zeros before a decimal point. Data on abbreviation use was collected starting in September 2003 by examining copies of patients' order sheets, which are sent from nursing units to the pharmacy for processing. Data were collected during three 24-hour periods each month, with 7-10 days between each period. A data collection sheet was developed to assist in documenting the number of opportunities for each unsafe abbreviation and the actual incidence of each. Educational strategies were developed and implemented starting in October 2003 to decrease the use of the unsafe abbreviations. These strategies included inservice education programs for the medical, pharmacy, and nursing staffs; laminated pocket cards; patient chart dividers; stickers; and interventions by pharmacists and nurses during medication prescribing. During the eight-month evaluation period, 20,160 orders were reviewed, representing 27,663 opportunities to use a designated unsafe abbreviation. Educational interventions successfully reduced the overall incidence of unsafe abbreviations from 19.69% to 3.31%.
Educational interventions markedly reduced the use of unsafe abbreviations in medication orders over an eight-month evaluation period.
描述在一级创伤中心为减少使用被认为不安全的缩写词和剂量标识所采取的教育干预措施。
对底特律接收医院减少使用不安全缩写词的策略进行了研究。该机构的用药和患者医疗安全委员会认定6种缩写词和剂量标识不安全:(1)U代表单位;(2)microg代表微克;(3)TIW代表每周三次;(4)度数符号代表小时;(5)小数点后尾随零;(6)小数点前缺少前导零。从2003年9月开始,通过检查从护理单元发送至药房处理的患者医嘱单副本,收集缩写词使用数据。每月在三个24小时时间段内收集数据,每个时间段间隔7 - 10天。制定了一份数据收集表,以协助记录每个不安全缩写词的出现机会数量及实际发生率。从2003年10月开始制定并实施教育策略,以减少不安全缩写词的使用。这些策略包括为医疗、药房和护理人员开展在职教育项目;使用塑封口袋卡片;患者病历分隔页;贴纸;以及药剂师和护士在开医嘱时进行干预。在为期八个月的评估期内,共审查了20,160份医嘱,代表了27,663次使用指定不安全缩写词的机会。教育干预成功地将不安全缩写词的总体发生率从19.69%降至3.31%。
在为期八个月的评估期内,教育干预显著减少了医嘱中不安全缩写词的使用。