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J Am Med Inform Assoc 2009;16:864-868 doi:10.1197/jamia.M2810
  • Original Investigation
  • Case Report

Time-dependent Drug–Drug Interaction Alerts in Care Provider Order Entry: Software May Inhibit Medication Error Reductions

  1. Heleen van der Sijs,
  2. Laureen Lammers,
  3. Annemieke van den Tweel,
  4. Jos Aarts,
  5. Marc Berg,
  6. Arnold Vulto,
  7. Teun van Gelder
  1. Affiliations of the authors: Department of Hospital Pharmacy (HvdS, LL, AvdT, TvG), Institute of Health Policy and Management (JA, MB), Department of Internal Medicine (TvG), Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, the Netherlands
  1. Correspondence: I.H. van der Sijs, Erasmus University Medical Center, Department of Hospital Pharmacy, PO Box 2040, 3000 CA, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; e-mail: <i.vandersijs{at}erasmusmc.nl>
  • Received 31 March 2008
  • Accepted 12 August 2009

Abstract

Time-dependent drug–drug interactions (TDDIs) are drug combinations that result in a decreased drug effect due to coadministration of a second drug. Such interactions can be prevented by separately administering the drugs. This study attempted to reduce drug administration errors due to overridden TDDIs in a care provider order entry (CPOE) system. In four periods divided over two studies, logged TDDIs were investigated by reviewing the time intervals prescribed in the CPOE and recorded on the patient chart. The first study showed significant drug administration error reduction from 56.4 to 36.2% (p < 0.05), whereas the second study was not successful (46.7 and 45.2%; p > 0.05). Despite interventions, drug administration errors still occurred in more than one third of cases and prescribing errors in 79–87%. Probably the low alert specificity, the unclear alert information content, and the inability of the software to support safe and efficient TDDI alert handling all diminished correct prescribing, and consequently, insufficiently reduced drug administration errors.

Footnotes

  • The authors thank Liselotte van der Meule-Soeting, Jan-Dietert Brugma and the pharmacy technicians for their help in checking time intervals on the patient charts.

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