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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 6/2010

01-06-2010 | Original Article

Electronic Prescribing Improves Medication Safety in Community-Based Office Practices

Authors: Rainu Kaushal, MD, MPH, Lisa M. Kern, MD, MPH, Yolanda Barrón, MS, Jill Quaresimo, RN, JD, Erika L. Abramson, MD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 6/2010

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Abstract

BACKGROUND

Although electronic prescribing (e-prescribing) holds promise for preventing prescription errors in the ambulatory setting, research on its effectiveness is inconclusive.

OBJECTIVE

To assess the impact of a stand-alone e-prescribing system on the rates and types of ambulatory prescribing errors.

DESIGN, PARTICIPANTS

Prospective, non-randomized study using pre-post design of 15 providers who adopted e-prescribing with concurrent controls of 15 paper-based providers from September 2005 through June 2007.

INTERVENTION

Use of a commercial, stand-alone e-prescribing system with clinical decision support including dosing recommendations and checks for drug-allergy interactions, drug-drug interactions, and duplicate therapies.

MAIN MEASURES

Prescribing errors were identified by a standardized prescription and chart review.

KEY RESULTS

We analyzed 3684 paper-based prescriptions at baseline and 3848 paper-based and electronic prescriptions at one year of follow-up. For e-prescribing adopters, error rates decreased nearly sevenfold, from 42.5 per 100 prescriptions (95% confidence interval (CI), 36.7–49.3) at baseline to 6.6 per 100 prescriptions (95% CI, 5.1–8.3) one year after adoption (p < 0.001). For non-adopters, error rates remained high at 37.3 per 100 prescriptions (95% CI, 27.6–50.2) at baseline and 38.4 per 100 prescriptions (95% CI, 27.4–53.9) at one year (p = 0.54). At one year, the error rate for e-prescribing adopters was significantly lower than for non-adopters (p < 0.001). Illegibility errors were very high at baseline and were completely eliminated by e-prescribing (87.6 per 100 prescriptions at baseline for e-prescribing adopters, 0 at one year).

CONCLUSIONS

Prescribing errors may occur much more frequently in community-based practices than previously reported. Our preliminary findings suggest that stand-alone e-prescribing with clinical decision support may significantly improve ambulatory medication safety.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

ClinicalTrials.gov, Taconic Health Information Network and Community (THINC), NCT00225563, http://​clinicaltrials.​gov/​ct2/​show/​NCT00225563?​term=​Kaushal&​rank=​6.
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Metadata
Title
Electronic Prescribing Improves Medication Safety in Community-Based Office Practices
Authors
Rainu Kaushal, MD, MPH
Lisa M. Kern, MD, MPH
Yolanda Barrón, MS
Jill Quaresimo, RN, JD
Erika L. Abramson, MD
Publication date
01-06-2010
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 6/2010
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-009-1238-8

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