1. Standardised drug labelling in intensive care: results of an international survey among ESICM members
- Author
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Andrew Rhodes, Nadine Wickboldt, Giuseppe Citerio, Marc Kastrup, Bernhard Walder, Jérôme Goncerut, Claudia Spies, Felix Balzer, Willehad Boemke, Balzer, F, Wickboldt, N, Spies, C, Walder, B, Goncerut, J, Citerio, G, Rhodes, A, Kastrup, M, and Boemke, W
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Internationality ,Standardization ,Color ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,law.invention ,Patient safety ,Norepinephrine ,law ,Labelling ,Intensive care ,Dobutamine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Hypoglycemic Agents ,Insulin ,Medication Errors ,Drug labelling ,Sympathomimetics ,Intensive care medicine ,Syringe ,Pharmaceutical industry ,Drug Labeling ,Descriptive statistics ,business.industry ,Questionnaire ,Syringes ,Medication error ,Intensive care unit ,Europe ,Syringe labelling ,Intensive Care Units ,Adrenergic beta-1 Receptor Agonists ,Family medicine ,Patient Safety ,Safety ,business - Abstract
Standardised coloured drug labels may increase patient safety in the intensive care unit (ICU). The rates of adherence to standardised drug syringe labelling (DSL) in European and non-European ICUs, and the standards applied are not known. The aim of this survey among ESICM members was to assess if and what standardised drug syringe labelling is used, if the standards for drug syringe labelling are similar internationally and if intensivists expect that standardised DSL should be delivered by the pharmaceutical industry. A structured, web-based, anonymised survey on standardised DSL, performed among ESICM members (March-May 2011; Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01232088). Descriptive data analysis was performed and Fisher's exact test was applied where applicable. Four hundred eighty-two submissions were analysed (20 % non-European). Thirty-five percent of the respondents reported that standardised drug labelling was used hospital-wide, and 39 % reported that standardised DSL was used in their ICU (Europe: Northern 53 %, Western 52 %, Eastern 17 %, Southern 22 %). The International Organization of Standardization (ISO) 26825 norm in its original form was used by 30 %, an adapted version by 19 % and local versions by 45 %; 6 % used labels that were included in the drug's packaging. Eighty percent wished that the pharmaceutical industry supplied ISO 26825 norm labelling together with the drugs. Standardised DSL is not widely applied in European and non-European ICUs and mostly does not adhere strictly to the ISO norm. The frequency and quality of DSL differs to a great extent among European regions. This leaves much room for improvement
- Published
- 2011