Physician order entry system assessed

Published: June 28, 2007 at 12:47 PM

MINNEAPOLIS, June 28 (UPI) -- A University of Minnesota study suggests the number of U.S. medication errors can be reduced by implementing a computerized physician order entry system.

University researchers, led by Tatyana Shamliyan of the Minnesota School of Public Health, reviewed 12 studies conducted between 1990 and 2005 that compared the handwritten and computerized medication errors made by hospital physicians.

Medication errors -- including the prescribing of a wrong drug, ordering an inaccurate dosage, or administering a drug at the wrong time -- decreased by as much as 66 percent in hospitals that switched to a computerized physician order entry system.

Illegible handwriting and transcription errors accounted for more than 60 percent of medication errors.

"Evidence from these studies show that computerized systems can reduce mistakes, but unfortunately less than 50 percent of hospitals have implemented these systems," said Shamliyan. "There is a lot of work to be done in the future."

The review was recently published in the online journal Health Services Research.

© 2007 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Average features key to female face beauty (34 min)
Want to avoid H1N1? -- fly first class (50 min)
NBA: Portland 105, Phoenix 102 (51 min)
Low omega-3 linked to schizophrenia risk (53 min)
NHL: San Jose 4, Anaheim 1
NYC may have restaurants post grades
Video gamers sharpen speed
fark
This is a bat eating a banana in the kitchen. Your argument is invalid
Hurricanes, crime, and poverty notwithstanding, Louisiana is the happiest state in the nation
Fortune picks top 10 dumbest things that happened in the financial world. It apparently took dozens...
Three friends descend into a deep, dark cavern. Only the Butt brothers emerge
Anti-whalers Sea Shepard complain because another ship is following them around, reporting their...
Woman, 24, commits suicide by jumping off Mackinac Bridge in Michigan. "Apparently, she was depressed....