Department of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2011 Jan-Feb;18(1):17-23. doi: 10.1136/jamia.2010.006130. Epub 2010 Dec 3.
Abbreviation use is a preventable cause of medication errors. The objective of this study was to test whether computerized alerts designed to reduce medication abbreviations and embedded within an electronic progress note program could reduce these abbreviations in the non-computer-assisted handwritten notes of physicians. Fifty-nine physicians were randomized to one of three groups: a forced correction alert group; an auto-correction alert group; or a group that received no alerts. Over time, physicians in all groups significantly reduced their use of these abbreviations in their handwritten notes. Physicians exposed to the forced correction alert showed the greatest reductions in use when compared to controls (p=0.02) and the auto-correction alert group (p=0.0005). Knowledge of unapproved abbreviations was measured before and after the intervention and did not improve (p=0.81). This work demonstrates the effects that alert systems can have on physician behavior in a non-computerized environment and in the absence of knowledge.
缩写的使用是导致用药错误的一个可预防的原因。本研究的目的是检验旨在减少药物缩写的计算机提示是否可以减少电子病历程序中手写医嘱的缩写。59 名医生被随机分配到三个组中:强制纠错提醒组;自动纠错提醒组;或不接受提醒的组。随着时间的推移,所有组的医生在手写医嘱中显著减少了缩写的使用。与对照组(p=0.02)和自动纠错提醒组(p=0.0005)相比,接受强制纠错提醒的医生在使用缩写方面的减少最为显著。干预前后对未经批准的缩写的了解并未提高(p=0.81)。这项工作表明,在非计算机化环境中,并且在缺乏知识的情况下,警报系统可以对医生的行为产生影响。