• Qual Saf Health Care · Oct 2008

    An educational and audit tool to reduce prescribing error in intensive care.

    • A N Thomas, E M Boxall, S K Laha, A J Day, and D Grundy.
    • Intensive Care Unit, Hope Hospital, Salford, UK. tony.thomas@srft.nhs.uk
    • Qual Saf Health Care. 2008 Oct 1; 17 (5): 360-3.

    AimTo reduce prescribing errors in an intensive care unit by providing prescriber education in tutorials, ward-based teaching and feedback in 3-monthly cycles with each new group of trainee medical staff.MethodsPrescribing audits were conducted three times in each 3-month cycle, once pretraining, once post-training and a final audit after 6 weeks. The audit information was fed back to prescribers with their correct prescribing rates, rates for individual error types and total error rates together with anonymised information about other prescribers' error rates.ResultsThe percentage of prescriptions with errors decreased over each 3-month cycle (pretraining 25%, 19%, (one missing data point), post-training 23%, 6%, 11%, final audit 7%, 3%, 5% (p<0.0005)). The total number of prescriptions and error rates varied widely between trainees (data collection one; cycle two: range of prescriptions written: 1-61, median 18; error rate: 0-100%; median: 15%).ConclusionPrescriber education and feedback reduce manual prescribing errors in intensive care.

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