[ Pharmaceutical Sciences Asia - ONLINE ]
E-ISSN 2586-8470
[ Journal Abbreviation: Pharm.Sci.Asia ]
Mahidol University Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
  FORMER NAME   "Mahidol University Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences" Published Since 1974

 
Abstracts

DOI: 10.29090/psa.2022.06.22.141Pharm Sci Asia 2022; 49(6), 550-555
 

Study of prescribing errors of two different prescription systems: pre-printed prescription from historical medication and hand-written prescription

Nisa Sae-lim1, Ploylarp Lertvipapath1,2*

1 Dispensing unit, Department of Pharmacy, Mahidol University, Siriraj Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand
2 Adverse drug reaction unit, Department of Pharmacy, Mahidol University, Siriraj Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand


A retrospective observational study of 1,160 prescriptions with prescribing errors from a large academic hospital in Thailand from 2014 to 2017. The aims of this study are to explore the proportion of prescribing error from pre-printed prescriptions and measure the frequency of prescribing errors in pre-printed versus hand-written prescriptions. Prescriptions with prescribing errors were stratified sampling and bootstrap resampling, then classified into 1) pre-printed historical medication prescriptions or pre-printed prescriptions 2) hand-written prescriptions. Some missed prescribing errors of each type of prescription were more identified by comparing the prescriptions with the medical records. Pre-printed prescriptions with prescribing errors constituted 767 (66%) of all collected prescriptions. The most commonly encountered prescribing error was “incomplete medication list in medical record”, while 393 (34%) hand-written prescriptions were found to have the wrong dosage strength. Hand-written prescriptions were 1.45 times more likely to have a major error compared to pre-printed prescriptions (OR: 1.45, 95%CI: 1.08-1.94, P 0.012). Although using pre-printed prescription can reduce some prescribing errors such as wrong dosage strength that occur with hand-written prescriptions, pre-printed prescriptions were found to have other prescribing errors. Procedures to improve the prescribing system to increase patient safety are needed.


Keyword:

Pre-printed prescription, Hand-written prescription, Patient safety, Prescribing error




Download full paper (PDF File size: 888.98 KB.)





Vol.49
No.6
November-December 2022

See other volume

 


Vol.49
No.5
September-October 2022

See other volume

 


Vol.49
No.4
July-August 2022

See other volume

 


Vol.49
No.3
May-June 2022

See other volume

 


Vol.49
No.2
March-April 2022

See other volume

 


Vol.49
No.1
January-February 2022

See other volume

 
 
 

Home
Aims and Scope
Editorial Board
Publication Ethics
Instruction to Authors
Announcement
All Volumes & Issues
Submit Online
Contact us
   
Search
   
Faculty of Pharmacy Mahidol University
Mahidol University
Member's menu

You're now loging on with following account:
Guest (unknown)

Please Sign in or Register



Pharmaceutical Sciences Asia by Faculty of Pharmacy, Mahidol University, Thailand is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

    Copyright © 2017-2024
    Faculty of Pharmacy, Mahidol University, THAILAND
 

We use Cookies

This site uses cookies to personalise your experience and analyse site traffic. By Clicking ACCEPT or continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies.