Title: Adverse Drug Reactions Medication Errors
1Adverse Drug ReactionsMedication Errors
- Oregon Poison Control Center
2Adverse Drug Reactions
- ADRs account for 10-20 of all hospital
admissions. - 45 of all admissions in those gt70 y.o.
- 106,000 Americans die needlessly from ADR or med
error each year. - 4th to 6th leading cause of death each year
3What is an ADR?
- Definition Any undesirable or unexpected event
that requires some change in the clinicians care
of the patient, including discontinuing the
medication, modifying the dose, prolonging
hospitalization, or initiating supportive care. - It does not include withdrawal, abuse, overdose
or error in administration.
4Types of ADRs
- Type A or Predictable when normal effects of
drugs are exaggerated to the point of being
undesirable. - They are dose dependent and related to the
expected pharmacologic action of the drug. - Most common types of reactions.
- Example nausea from pain medication
5Types of ADRs cont..
- Type B, Unpredictable occur when there is an
effect from medication that is unrelated to the
drugs known pharmacologic action. - Includes idiosyncratic, immunologic, allergic,
carcinogenic, and teratogenic reactions.
6Types of ADRs cont...
- Type C Associated with the long term use of a
drug, chronic exposure, or total dose exposure. - Example chronic renal failure from long term use
of NSAIDs. - Type D Delayed adverse drug effects,
carcinogenicity, teratogenicity - Example teratogenic effects of chemotherapeutic
agents.
7Examples of ADRs in History
- Mercury
- Acrodynia with death in 5 - 1948
- Thalidomide
- phocomelia- congenital absence of limbs-1961
- Flecainide
- CAST trial- more died from Flecainide than from
placebo 1985
8Examples of ADRs in History.
- Cacium Channel blockers
- short acting increases risk of MI? 1995
- Terfenadine
- torsade de pointes from interactions 1992
- Fenfluramine and Dexfenfluramine (Redux)
- valvular heart disease in 1997
9More history of ADRs...
- Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatories (NSAIDS)
- 70,000 hospitalizations and 7,000 deaths/yr from
GI bleeding or acute renal failure. - Troglitazone
- hepatotoxicity (2000)
10Adverse Drug Reactions Levels.
- Minor no antidote, no therapy or prolongation of
hospitalization required - Moderate requires a change in drug therapy,
specific treatment or an increase in
hospitalization by at least one day. - Severe potentially life threatening, causing
permanent damage, or requiring intensive medical
care - Lethal directly or indirectly contributes to the
death of the patient
11Mechanism of Adverse Drug Reactions
- Idiosyncrasy an uncharacteristic response of a
patient to a drug, usually not occurring on
administration. - Hypersensitivity (allergic reaction) a reaction,
not explained by the pharmacological effects of
the drug, caused by altered reactivity to the
patient and generally considered to be an
allergic manifestation from an immunologic drug.
12Mechanisms of ADR cont..
- Intolerance a characteristic pharmacological
effect of a drug produced by an unusually small
dose, so that the usual dose tends to induce a
massive overreaction. - Idiopathic pertaining to conditions without
clear pathogenesis, or disease without
recognizable cause.
13Mechanisms of ADR cont..
- Pharmacologic a known, inherent pharmacologic
effect of a drug, directly related to the dose
given. - Side Effect definition a well known reaction
that occurs with predictable frequency. Usually
mild in nature, resulting in little or no change
in patient management.
14Mechanism of ADRs cont...
- Toxic reaction dose-related and predictable
reaction de to greater than recommended drug
dosage or drug concentration in the body. Some
toxic reactions are due to intentional overdose.
15Indicator drugs of an ADR event
- Antidiarrheals Potassium
- Atropine Protamine
- Dextrose (IV push), Steroids (topical)
- Diphenhydramine Vitamin K
- Epinephrine Narcan
- Flumazenil
- Kayexalate
16Reporting ADRs
- Kefauver-Harris Amendment required FDA to have a
spontaneous reporting system for ADRs. - FDA developed MedWatch program in 1993.
- Drug companies are required by FDA to submit
quarterly reports of all ADRs for first 3 years
that a drug is on the market
17What is MedWatch?
- Voluntary reporting system for health care
professionals. - Pharmacists report most ADRs.
- Can send ADR reports via mail, phone, fax and
computer, using MedWatch reporting Form - JCAHO requires hospitals to have ADR reporting
program via PT and Rx dept.(part of CQI)
18Goals of MEDWATCH
- To increase awareness of drug and device-induced
disease. - To clarify what should and should not be reported
to the agency. - To make it easier to report by operating a single
system for health professionals to report adverse
events and product problems - To provide regular feedback to health care
community about safety issues of medical products
19Adverse Events to be Reported
- Death if the patients death is suspected as
being a direct outcome of the adverse event. - Life-threatening if the patient was at
substantial risk of dying at the time of the
adverse event or it is suspected that the use or
continued use of the product would result in the
patients death.
20Adverse Events to be Reported
- Hospitalization (initial or prolonged) if
admission to the hospital or prolongation of a
hospital stay results from the adverse event. - Disability if the adverse event resulted in a
significant, persistent or permanent change,
impairment, damage or disruption in the patients
body function/structure, physical activities or
quality of life.
21Adverse Events to be Reported
- Congenital anomaly If there are suspicions that
exposure to a medical product prior to conception
or during pregnancy resulted in an adverse
outcome in the child. - Prevention of permanent damage If the adverse
event requires intervention to prevent permanent
impairment or damage.
22Medication Errors
- Any preventable event that may cause or lead to
inappropriate medication use or patient harm
while the medication is in the control of the
health care professional, patient, or consumer.
Such events may be related to professional
practice, health care products, procedures, and
systems, including prescribing, order
communication, product labeling, packaging and
nomenclature compounding, dispensing,
distribution, administration, education,
monitoring and use.
23The 5 Drug Rights
- Each medication dose dispensed must comply with
these five rights to be free of error - Right patient
- Right drug
- Right dose
- Right route
- Right time
24Types of Errors
- Prescribing errors Compliance error
- Omission errors Monitoring error
- Wrong time errors Deteriorated drug error
- Unauthorized drug error
- Improper dose error
- Wrong dosage form error
- Wrong drug preparation error
- Wrong administration technique
25Drugs Causing the Most Errors
- Hospitals
- Intravenous drugs (70 of med errors)
- Pharmacist malpractice cases
- warfarin, corticosteroids, hypoglycemic agents,
digoxin, amoxicillin and phenytoin. - Physician malpractice cases
- antibiotics, corticosteroids, narcotics,
cardiovascular agents
26Causes of Errors
- Performance Error
- Excessive task demand (workload)
- personal characteristics (fatigue, stress level)
- Extra-organizational factors (sound a like drugs
- Work environment (distractions, noise)
- Intra-organizational (high output demand)
27Causes of Errors cont..
- Lack of communication (not clarifying order)
- Dispensing errors (not double/triple checking
drugs, label, Rx, etc) - Lack of knowledge (covering in specialized area
where youre not experienced) - Lack of patient counseling- should be last safety
check for drug/indication/dose etc.
28Reporting of ADR and Errors
- ADR
- MedWatch- developed by FDA
- monitors ADRs for quality, performance, and
safety of medical products. - ERRORS
- USP-ISMP Medication Errors Reporting Program
(MERP). - Errors can be reported anonymously 24hr/day
- Errors are reviewed by USP and forwarded to the
manufacturer and the FDA - MedMARx developed by USP, fee for use system
- compare error rates between organizations
- perform root cause analysis as required by JCAHO
29USP- United States Pharmacopeia
- Independent, science-based, non-profit, public
health organization for 185 yrs. - Official public standards-setting authority for
all prescription and OTC medicines, dietary
supplements and healthcare products in the United
States.
30USP-ISMP
- Non-Profit agency founded in 1994
- Not a governmental agency, does not set policies,
laws, or accreditation - Work collaboratively with governmental,
regulatory, inspecting and accrediting agencies
to influence medication safety - Funded by charitable donations, unrestricted
grants, subscriptions, fees from consulting and
educational services
31ISMP at Work
- Children's Tylenol recall
- From the June 2005 issue
- In late March, we received a report from a
pharmacist regarding potentially confusing
labeling and packaging of Children's TYLENOL
MELTAWAYS (acetaminophen) that could lead to
accidental overdoses. We investigated the problem
and alerted our subscribers about our findings in
the April 2005 issue of this newsletter. The
product, for kids aged 2 to 6, comes in blister
packs that contain either one or two 80 mg
tablets, but the front of the carton indicates
"medicine per dose 80 mg," and all of the blister
packs are labeled "Children's Tylenol 80 mg."
With the two tablet blisters, parents or
healthcare practitioners may assume that BOTH
tablets should be given to provide the 80 mg,
resulting in a dangerous double dose that, if
repeated over time, could even cause liver
damage. - ISMP promptly followed up with both the FDA and
Johnson Johnson's McNeil Consumer Specialty
Pharmaceuticals division to suggest a recall and
urge that future labeling and packaging clearly
indicate the exact milligram amount enclosed in
each blister. On Friday, June 3, McNeil announced
the recall of several Tylenol products for
children. Your reports really do make a
difference!
32USP-MEDMARX
- Internet-based medication error and ADR reporting
program, designed for use in hospitals and health
systems. - Works with JCAHO
- Fee based service
- Gives trends, statistics, etc for health care
institutions in the US for your institution to
compare with
33Oregon Poison Control Center and Drug Information
Center
- 24 hr health care information center at OHSU
serving Oregon with DI and Poison info. - Goals
- Public education
- Medical treatment information
- Professional education to health care providers
34OHSU Drug Information Service
- Respond to provider requests
- Support PT Committee at OHSU
- Formulary Management
- ADR reporting
- Education resource
- Residents, clerkship students, interns
- Pharmacist, nurse, physician in-services
35Oregon Poison Control Center
- Where is it?
- OHSU, Portland
- How do I get ahold of them?
- National toll free number 1(800)222-1222
- What states does Oregons center (OPC) serve?
- Oregon, northern Nevada, Alaskan terr.
36Establishment of OPC
- OPC established by act of Oregon State
Legislature in 1978 to provide emergency
treatment information for patients experiencing a
poisoning or toxic exposure. - Provides public education and professional
education to health care providers
37OPC staff
- Nurses, and pharmacists, Medical toxicologists
serve as backup/resource. - 70,000 calls a year (191 calls/day)
- Resources computer databases, textbooks, journal
articles - Provide follow-up with patients for 3-7 days
after initial contact
38Who calls the OPC?
- 60 parents of young children
- Primary patients receiving assistance are
children less than 6 yrs old - Most calls originate from the public
- Medications are most frequent substance of
exposure - Household products are 2nd most frequent
39OPC- Pharmaceuticals
- Pain relievers represent largest substance
exposure - OTC pain relievers represent greatest number of
poisoning incidents and greatest number of
hospital visits. - Most fatalities occur in adults-
- Suicide and drug abuse leading causes of DEATH
40OPC working with Health Professionals
- Poison information
- Drug identification
- Plant/substance identification
- Treatment information
41OPC cuts death rate from poisoning
- 4 million poisonings each year in US
- With legislation for poison control centers, drug
information centers, child proof containers,
death rates from poisonings have decreased 10
fold since 1965.
42Examples of common poisons
- MEDICINES
- Pain or fever relievers
- Iron tablets
- Vitamins with iron
- Cough and cold preparations
- CLEANERS
- Toilet cleaners, drain openers
- Laundry detergent and bleach
- Kerosene, gasoline and lamp oils
- Antifreeze and windshield washer fluids
43Tips to prevent poisonings
- Buy products with child resistant caps
- Always tightly close caps after use
- Keep meds and cleaners out of sight
- Use child resistant latches on cabinets
- Dont put poison in empty food containers
- Clean up after working in garden,garage
- Dispose of cleaners, old, expired meds
- Call PCC or 911have container with you