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Medication discrepancies in transition of care of hospitalised children in Brazil: a multicentric study

Authors :
Erica Freire Vasconcelos-Pereira
Cristiane Munaretto Ferreira
Dyego Carlos Souza Anacleto de Araújo
Giulyane Targino Aires-Moreno
Vanessa Marcon de Oliveira
Alfredo Dias de Oliveira-Filho
Vanessa Terezinha Gubert
Ana Rafaela Pires Lira
Simony da Mota Soares
Layse Maria Soares de Oliveira
Clarice Chemello
Divaldo Pereira de Lyra
Thaciana dos Santos Alcântara
Source :
Archives of disease in childhood. 106(10)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine the incidence of medication discrepancies in transition points of care of hospitalised children.DesignA prospective observational multicentre study was carried out between February and August 2019. Data collection consisted of the following steps: sociodemographic data collection, clinical interview with the patient’s caregiver, review of patient prescriptions and evaluation of medical records. Medication discrepancies were classified as intentional (documented or undocumented) and unintentional. In addition, discrepancies identified were categorised according to the medication discrepancy taxonomy. Unintentional discrepancies were assessed for potential clinical harm to the patient.SettingPaediatric clinics of four teaching hospitals in Brazil.PatientsChildren aged 1 month–12 years.FindingsA total of 248 children were included, 77.0% (n=191) patients had at least one intentional discrepancy; 20.2% (n=50) patients had at least one unintended discrepancy and 15.3% (n=38) patients had at least one intentional discrepancy and an unintentional one. The reason for the intentional discrepancy was not documented in 49.6% (n=476) of the cases. The most frequent unintentional discrepancy was medication omission (54.1%; n=66). Low potential to cause discomfort was found in 53 (43.4%) unintentional discrepancies, while 55 (45.1%) had the potential to cause moderate discomfort and 14 (11.5%) could potentially cause severe discomfort.ConclusionsAlthough most medication discrepancies were intentional, the majority of these were not documented by the healthcare professionals. Unintentional discrepancies were often related to medication omission and had a potential risk of causing harm to hospitalised children.

Details

ISSN :
14682044
Volume :
106
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Archives of disease in childhood
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....602d5bc7757b0bce206f82b706dba859