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Analysis of Medication-Related Deaths in Denmark
Author(s) -
Lars Dahlgaard Hove,
Johannes E. Bock,
Jens Christoffersen
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
isrn public health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2090-8008
DOI - 10.1155/2013/214893
Subject(s) - medicine , contraindication , dosing , retrospective cohort study , emergency medicine , intensive care medicine , alternative medicine , pathology
Objective. To investigate the circumstances associated with medication-related deaths. Design and Setting. This retrospective study investigated closed claims concerning medication-related deaths from 1996 to 2008 registered by the Danish Patient Insurance Association (DPIA). Results. A total of 80 were patients registered as having died because of an adverse event or error associated with a medication, and 37 of these cases were considered to have been preventable. The circumstances of the 37 deaths are described in detail in this report. Orthopaedic surgery, anaesthesiology, and internal medicine were the specialties involved in the majority of the deaths. Incorrect dosing was the cause of 17 deaths, and the use of the wrong drug caused 11 deaths. The administration of a drug despite a known allergy/intolerance or contraindication caused 6 deaths. Other 5 deaths were caused by anticoagulation medications. Methotrexate given daily by mistake caused 2 deaths. Conclusion. This study describes the circumstances of 37 preventable deaths caused by medication. Drug administration despite a known allergy, opioids, sedative, anticonvulsive medicine, and incorrect dosing and incorrect use of anticoagulants are the most important areas to be addressed in the development of future patient safety measures to reduce patient deaths caused by or related to medications.

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