The effect of a multifaceted educational intervention on medication preparation and administration errors in neonatal intensive care.

Category Primary study
JournalArchives of disease in childhood. Fetal and neonatal edition
Year 2012
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OBJECTIVE:

To examine the effect of a multifaceted educational intervention on the incidence of medication preparation and administration errors in a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU).

DESIGN:

Prospective study with a preintervention and postintervention measurement using direct observation.

SETTING:

NICU in a tertiary hospital in the Netherlands.

INTERVENTION:

A multifaceted educational intervention including teaching and self-study.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:

The incidence of medication preparation and administration errors. Clinical importance was assessed by three experts.

RESULTS:

The incidence of errors decreased from 49% (43-54%) (151 medications with one or more errors of 311 observations) to 31% (87 of 284) (25-36%). Preintervention, 0.3% (0-2%) medications contained severe errors, 26% (21-31%) moderate and 23% (18-28%) minor errors; postintervention, none 0% (0-2%) was severe, 23% (18-28%) moderate and 8% (5-12%) minor. A generalised estimating equations analysis provided an OR of 0.49 (0.29-0.84) for period (p=0.032), (route of administration (p=0.001), observer within period (p=0.036)).

CONCLUSIONS:

The multifaceted educational intervention seemed to have contributed to a significant reduction of the preparation and administration error rate, but other measures are needed to improve medication safety further.
Epistemonikos ID: 3332bbb53a89a6adb55e99482ce1d05a5277413a
First added on: Jan 28, 2017