Pharmacoeconomics and Safe Medication Use
vi.
Category F: An error occurred that may have contributed to or resulted in temporary harm to
the patient and required initial or prolonged hospitalization
vii.
Category G: An error occurred that may have contributed to or resulted in permanent patient
harm
viii.
Category H: An error occurred that required intervention necessary to sustain life
ix.
Category I: An error occurred that may have contributed to or resulted in the patientβs death
Medication errors are defined by The Joint Commission as a sentinel event that includes events such
as those that cause severe temporary harm (requiring intervention), permanent harm, or death (e.g.,
potentially category E, categories FβI).
| d. | May be reported through the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP Medication Error |
|---|
Reporting Program)
A confidential and voluntary system, investigated by ISMP staff and then reported to the FDAβs
MedWatch program and product vendors
ii.
A separate reporting method is used for vaccines, specifically the ISMP Vaccine Errors
Reporting Program. Vaccine medication error reports provide an option to submit the vaccineβs
manufacturer name, dosage, lot number, expiration date, and National Drug Code.
iii.
Consumers may also report medication errors through ISMP.
iv.
Medication errors may be reported directly to the FDA by the MedWatch system. The FDAβs
MedWatch allows ADE and medication error reporting.
Adverse drug events
Injuries resulting from use of a drug, which include harm caused by the drug (ADRs and overdoses)
and harm from use of the drug, including dose changes and discontinuations of drug therapy
Overall, ADE is the broader term used to describe any harmful event associated with a medication,
including inappropriate use such as an overdose, whereas ADR is used when an adverse response,
including harm, occurs with normal use of the medication.
Preventable ADEs
A preventable ADE occurs when a breach of standard professional behavior, practice, or technique
was identified or when necessary precautions were not taken, or when the event was preventable by
modifying behavior, practice, technique, or care.
Results from any medication error that reaches the patient and causes harm
ii.
About 30%β50% of all ADEs are preventable.
iii.
Drug interactions account for 3%β5% of all preventable in-hospital ADRs (drug interactions
are discussed further in section IV, Drug Interaction Surveillance and Prevention).
Examples of preventable ADEs
Carbamazepine prescribed for an Asian patient with bipolar disorder without testing for the
HLA-B*1502 allele; in turn, the patient develops carbamazepine-induced toxic epidermal
necrolysis
ii.
Heparin administered without the use of weight-based dosing, causing a supratherapeutic
partial thromboplastin time and an intracranial hemorrhage
iii.
Phenytoin mixed accidentally with dextrose rather than normal saline, causing precipitation
and lack of drug potency and leading to a patient developing withdrawal seizures and status
epilepticus
Nonpreventable ADEs
ADEs not associated with a medication error and are unintended reactions without known mitigation
strategies resulting in patient harm (a patient with a bleed despite appropriate dosing, administration,
and monitoring of the anticoagulant)