Lecture 18 Flashcards

1
Q

define adverse drug event

A

harm caused from medical

intervention relating to a drug

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2
Q

define adverse drug reaction

A

any response to a drug which is harmful and unintended

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3
Q

define drug allergy

A

Distinct subgroup of an adverse drug reaction

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4
Q

what is an adverse drug reaction - type A (augmented)

A

• 80% of ADRs in the hospital setting or causing admission
• Pharmacological effects that are predictable and dose dependent. The ADR is an exaggeration of the
normal effects of the drug
• Should be readily recognised by prescribers
• Can manage through dose
reduction, changing drug etc.

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5
Q

what is an adverse drug reaction - type B (Biazarre)

A

Account for ~10% of reactions
• High mortality
• Small population affected  individual patient host factors are important
• Management requires stopping the offending drug and avoiding in the future

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6
Q

Adverese drug events in Australia

A

Medication related hospital admissions are estimated to comprise 2-3% of all Australian hospital admissions
• 230,000 hospital admissions in Australia annually
• $1.2 billion annual cost
• 20-30% of all admissions in those aged > 65 years are
estimated to be medication related
• ¾ are preventable
- Errors occur in 15-20% of drug administrations on hospital wards

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7
Q

what do medication errors result in?

A
  • An adverse drug event if a patient is harmed
  • A near miss if a patient is nearly harmed or
  • Neither harm nor potential for harm
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8
Q

what do medication errors occur due to ?

A
  • Failure at an individual (person) level
  • Failure at a system level
  • Combination of the two
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9
Q

when do medication errors occur?

A
  • on admission
  • 60-80% of patients have a medication discrepancy with their medication history
  • prescribing errors (2.5%)
  • adminstartion errors (5-10% of errors).
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10
Q

what patients are most at risk of medicaton errors?

A

• Patients on multiple medications
• Patients with another condition, e.g. renal
impairment, pregnancy
• Patients who cannot communicate well
• Patients who have more than one doctor
• Patients who do not take an active role in their own medication use
• Children and babies (dose calculations required)

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11
Q

what are the risk factors contributing to medication error

A
  • Inexperience
  • Rushing
  • Doing two things at once
  • Interruptions
  • Fatigue, boredom, being on “automatic pilot”
  • Lack of checking and double checking habits
  • Poor teamwork and/or communication between colleagues
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12
Q

how can prescribing go wrong?

A
  • inadquate knowledge
  • not considering individual patient factors
  • Wrong patient, wrong dose, wrong time, wrong drug, wrong route
  • inadequate communication
  • documentation (illegible)
  • mathematical error
  • incorrect data
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13
Q

What case study got prescribed the wrong medication?

A
  • Mrs A

- methotrexate for arthritis

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14
Q

how to improve medication safety?

A
  • improving prescribing
  • electronic prescrbing
  • tall man lettering
  • standardised medical charts
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