Abstract

Objective. General practitioners have a key role in updating their patients’ medication. Poor communication regarding patients’ drug use may easily occur when patients cross health care levels. We wanted to explore whether such inadequate communication leads to errors in patients’ medication on admission, during hospital stay, and after discharge, and whether these errors were potentially harmful. Design. Exploratory case study of 30 patients. Setting: General practices in central Norway and medical ward of Innlandet Hospital Trust Gjøvik, Norway. Subjects: 30 patients urgently admitted to the medical ward, and using three or more drugs on admission. Main outcome measures. Discrepancies between the patients’ actual drugs taken and what was recorded on admission to hospital, during hospitalization, at discharge, and five weeks after hospital stay. The discrepancies were grouped according to the NCC Merp Index for Categorizing Medication Errors to assess their potential harm. Results. The 30 patients used a total of 250 drugs, and 50 medication errors were found, affecting 18 of the patients; 27 errors were potentially harmful, according to NCC Merp Index: 23 in category E, four in category F. Half of the errors originated from an incomplete medication list in the referral letter. Conclusion. The majority of the medication errors were made when the patients were admitted to hospital, and a substantial proportion were potentially harmful. The medication list should be reviewed together with the patient on admission, and each patient should carry an updated medication list provided by his or her general practitioner.

Details

Title
Poor communication on patients’ medication across health care levels leads to potentially harmful medication errors
Author
Frydenberg, Karin 1 ; Brekke, Mette 2 

 Skreia Medical Center,Skreia, Norway; Department of Medicine, Innlandet Hospital Trust Gjøvik, Norway; Department of General Practice, Institute of Health and Society, University of Oslo, Norway 
 Department of General Practice, Institute of Health and Society, University of Oslo, Norway 
End page
240
Publication year
2012
Publication date
Dec 2012
Publisher
Taylor & Francis LLC
ISSN
02813432
e-ISSN
15027724
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2199205148
Copyright
© 2012 Informa Healthcare. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.