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Medication Errors among Physician-Assistants Anaesthesia
Author(s) -
G. Amponsah,
Akwasi AntwiKusi,
William E. Addison,
Benjamin Abaidoo
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
advances in anesthesiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2356-6574
pISSN - 2314-7555
DOI - 10.1155/2016/9243587
Subject(s) - medicine , medication error , patient safety , specialty , emergency medicine , anesthesia , family medicine , medical emergency , pediatrics , health care , economics , economic growth
Background. Safety issues in anaesthesia are currently being discussed widely. Anaesthetists have a unique cross-specialty opportunity to influence the safety and quality of patient care. Anaesthetists administer very potent drugs, in rapid succession, during the course of one anaesthesia event. Methodology. The study was done in April 2013 at the annual refresher course of the Physician-Assistants Anaesthesia using a questionnaire which was completed by the participants on the course. The data was analysed using IBM SPSS Statistics software version 20. Results. There were 164 completed questionnaires, with 92 (62.2%) males and 56 (37.8%) females with a mean age of 32.3 years. The majority of them (66.5%) work in government hospitals. One hundred and seven (65.3%) have had an episode of medication error with 101 (94.4%) experiencing it between 1 and 5 times. The incident occurred in the afternoon or at night in 73 (71.7%) cases. The commonest type of incident was the administration of wrong drug which occurred on 64 (71.9%) occasions resulting in 3 deaths. The contributing factors included distraction, tiredness, and overreliance on vial/ampoule colour. Conclusion. Medication errors among Physician-Assistants Anaesthesia are not uncommon leading to harm and even death of patients. The rate of medication errors can be minimised by addressing some of the contributory factors raised by the respondents.

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