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Does critical incident reporting contribute to medication error prevention?

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Does critical incident reporting contribute to medication error prevention?

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Frey B, Buettiker V, Hug MI, Waldvogel K, Gessler P, Ghelfi D, Hodler C, Baenziger O.Department of Intensive Care and Neonatology, University Children’s Hospital, Steinwiesstrasse 75, 8032 Zürich, Switzerland.

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Medication-related critical incidents (CIs) comprise harmful and potentially harmful events. The aim of CI monitoring is quality improvement through system changes. In a prospective survey, we analysed our drug-related CIs of the year 2001 with an emphasis on how they contributed to system changes. A voluntary, anonymous, non-punitive CI reporting was used. The study was performed in a multidisciplinary, 23-bed, neonatal-paediatric intensive care unit (ICU). CI severity was graded: minor (no interventions required), moderate (requiring routine therapy, available outside the ICU), major (need for therapeutic interventions specific to the ICU). There were 284 drug-related CIs, 76% (95% confidence interval 71%-81%) of minor, 19% of moderate and 5% of major severity. A total of 24 CIs were potentially life threatening (if not detected). Some 27% of CIs were intercepted, 17% before preparation and 10% before administration of the drug to the patient. There was a negative correlation between

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