Drug–Drug Interactions and Actual Harm to Hospitalized Patients: A Multicentre Study Examining the Prevalence Pre- and Post-Electronic Medication System Implementation

Ling Li, Jannah Baker, Renee Quirk, Danielle Deidun,Maria Moran, Ahmed Abo Salem, Nanda Aryal, Bethany A. Van Dort,Wu Yi Zheng, Andrew Hargreaves, Paula Doherty, Sarah N. Hilmer,Richard O. Day, Johanna I. Westbrook,Melissa T. Baysari

Drug Safety(2024)

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摘要
Drug–drug interactions (DDIs) have potential to cause patient harm, including lowering therapeutic efficacy. This study aimed to (i) determine the prevalence of potential DDIs (pDDIs); clinically relevant DDIs (cDDIs), that is, DDIs that could lead to patient harm, taking into account a patient’s individual clinical profile, drug effects and severity of potential harmful outcome; and subsequent actual harm among hospitalized patients and (ii) examine the impact of transitioning from paper-based medication charts to electronic medication management (eMM) on DDIs and patient harms. This was a secondary analysis of the control arm of a controlled pre-post study. Patients were randomly selected from three Australian hospitals. Retrospective chart review was conducted before and after the implementation of an eMM system, without accompanying clinical decision support alerts for DDIs. Harm was assessed by an expert panel. Of 1186 patient admissions, 70.1
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