Ashp Definition Medication Error
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Ashp Guidelines On Preventing Medication Errors
Article » Table of Contents This Article American Journal of Health-System ashp medication reconciliation Pharmacy February 1, 1982 vol. 39 no. 2 321 Classifications Articles Services Email this article to a
Ashp Medication Shortages
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Definition Of Medication Error In Nursing
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How To Prevent Medication Errors In Nursing
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journal Editorial board Rights & permissions Dispatch date of the next issue Publishers' books for review SubmitInstructions for authors Submit now Self-archiving policy Open access options Subscribe AdvertiseCorporate services Advertising Reprints and ePrints Sponsored supplements Books and custom publishing Editor in chiefYu-Chuan (Jack) Li Impact factor2.5455 Year impact factor2.631 Published on behalf ofThe International Society for Quality in Health Care Errors in the medication process: frequency, type, and potential clinical consequences You have accessRestricted access Marianne Lisby, Lars Peter Nielsen, Jan Mainz DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzi015 15-22 First published online: 24 January 2005 ArticleFigures & dataInformation & metricsExplorePDF Abstract Objective. To investigate the frequency, type, and consequences of medication errors in more stages of the medication process, including discharge summaries. Design. A cross-sectional study using three methods to detect errors in the medication process: direct observations, unannounced control visits, and chart reviews. With the exception of errors in discharge summaries all potential medication error consequences were evaluated by physicians and pharmacists. Setting. A randomly selected medical and surgical department at Aarhus University Hospital, Denmark. Study participants. Eligible in-hospital patients aged 18 or over (n = 64), physicians prescribing drugs and nurses dispensing and administering drugs. Main outcome measures. Frequency, type, and potential clinical consequences of all detected errors compared with the total number of opportunities for error. Results. We detected a total of 1065 errors in 2467 opportunities for errors (43%). In worst case scenario 20–30% of all evaluated medication errors were assessed as potential adverse drug events. In each stage the frequency of medication errors we