Drug prescribing in patients with renal impairment optimized by a computer-based, semi-automated system

Male Dose-Response Relationship, Drug Inappropriate Prescribing Pharmacists Medical Order Entry Systems 3. Good health Hospitalization 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Pharmaceutical Preparations Practice Guidelines as Topic Humans Medication Errors Drug Dosage Calculations Female Renal Insufficiency Hospitals, Teaching Pharmacy Service, Hospital Aged
DOI: 10.1007/s11096-013-9843-3 Publication Date: 2013-09-10T15:47:19Z
ABSTRACT
According to several studies, despite of the existence of several published guidelines for dosing adjustments based on renal function, inappropriate prescribing is a common drug-related problem in inpatient care.We developed and implemented a system for drug dosage adjustment integrated into the Hospital computer provider order entry system. This system allows pharmacists to identify patients with reduced renal function, identify medication orders that may require dosage modifications based on renal function, and generate an alert with a recommendation of specific dosage adjustment. Using the Summary of Product Characteristics and two drug databases (Micromedex 2.0® and Lexicomp®), specific dosage guidelines for drugs used in patients with renal impairment were established.A 264-bed tertiary teaching hospital.We performed a quasi-experimental, one-group, pretest-posttest study to assess the efficacy of this intervention program. We compared the differences between the frequency of appropriate orders pre- and post-test using the McNemar test.the frequency of appropriate orders before the recommendation (pre-test) and after the recommendation (post-test).Before the intervention, the frequency of appropriate prescribing based on renal function was 65 %. After the intervention, this frequency was 86 % (p < 0.001). The interventions were more frequent in the emergency department (45 %). The program required 30-45 min of pharmacist time per day. The average number of patients reviewed daily was 28. This study found that a computer-based, semi-automated drug-dosage program for renal failure patients was able to reduce the number of inappropriate orders due to renal insufficiency.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (29)
CITATIONS (22)
EXTERNAL LINKS
PlumX Metrics
RECOMMENDATIONS
FAIR ASSESSMENT
Coming soon ....
JUPYTER LAB
Coming soon ....