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Preventing Home Medication Administration Errors

Authors :
Rohit Shenoi
Shannon C. Phillips
Sandra P. Spencer Cockerham
Ian M. Paul
Richard N. Shiffman
Bridgette L. Jones
Sean P. Gleeson
Kathleen A. Neville
Wayne H. Franklin
Laura Elizabeth Ferguson
Joel S. Tieder
Michael G. Leu
Matthew M. Laughon
Janice E. Sullivan
Jeffrey M. Brown
Thomas P. Green
Constance S. Houck
John R. Reigart
Elizabeth V. Saarel
Kathleen Mack Walsh
Philip A. Verhoef
Jennifer Foster
H. Shonna Yin
Michael L. Rinke
John N. van den Anker
Ricardo A. Quinonez
Francisco Alvarez
Adam C. Adler
Terry A. Adirim
David G. Bundy
Brigitta U. Mueller
Ulfat Shaikh
Corinna J. Rea
Daniel R. Neuspiel
Source :
Pediatrics. 148(6)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Medication administration errors that take place in the home are common, especially when liquid preparations are used and complex medication schedules with multiple medications are involved; children with chronic conditions are disproportionately affected. Parents and other caregivers with low health literacy and/or limited English proficiency are at higher risk for making errors in administering medications to children in their care. Recommended strategies to reduce home medication errors relate to provider prescribing practices; health literacy–informed verbal counseling strategies (eg, teachback and showback) and written patient education materials (eg, pictographic information) for patients and/or caregivers across settings (inpatient, outpatient, emergency care, pharmacy); dosing-tool provision for liquid medication measurement; review of medication lists with patients and/or caregivers (medication reconciliation) that includes prescription and over-the-counter medications, as well as vitamins and supplements; leveraging the medical home; engaging adolescents and their adult caregivers; training of providers; safe disposal of medications; regulations related to medication dosing tools, labeling, packaging, and informational materials; use of electronic health records and other technologies; and research to identify novel ways to support safe home medication administration.

Details

ISSN :
10984275
Volume :
148
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d14a819a5ead26634b007cf17c471947