Infants often given cardiac drugs in wrong doses
July 8th, 2009 - 3:17 pm ICT by IANS
- Washington, July 8 (IANS) Infants treated with cardiac drugs get the wrong dose or end up on the wrong end of medication errors more often than older children, according to new research.
While researchers found the highest number of errors among infants under the age of one, they said children of all ages were vulnerable to such mistakes. This is because health-care providers can manually miscalculate weight-sensitive doses and can misinterpret safe age ranges of adult drugs used for children.
“We found that cardiac medication errors happen in children, and they can happen every step of the way but dosing and administration errors were ominously common,” said lead investigator Marlene Miller, Johns Hopkins Childrens’ Hospital Centre.
Researchers emphasised that the vast majority of such errors - 96 percent - were benign and caused no detectable harm to patients or never reached the patients, but in four percent of the cases there was harm, although no deaths.
The report and the warnings were drawn from a study analyzing 821 medication errors submitted to a national voluntary error-reporting database.
Half of the errors occurred in children younger than one year, and 90 percent involved children under the age of six months.
Newborns and infants with congenital heart disease - which occurs in four out of 1,000 US babies - are at high risk for such errors since heart medications are most commonly prescribed for them, researchers said.
The other half of dosing errors occurred in patients between the ages of one and six years.
The investigators say certain medication errors in children can be reduced or prevented by computerizing drug orders with built-in double-and triple-checking mechanisms that reduce the likelihood for miscalculation or misinterpretation.
These findings were published in Paediatrics.
Sphere: Related ContentRelated Stories
- 'Many cancer patients given wrong chemotherapy drug doses' - Jan 02, 2009
- Monitoring your own medication can be fatal - Jul 29, 2008
- Soon, tests that may predict Alzheimer''s patients driving safety - Feb 10, 2009
- 1 in 3 patients with asthma or COPD use inhalers incorrectly: Study - Nov 14, 2007
- Diabetes drug 'increases heart failure risk' - Aug 21, 2009
- Scientists develop powerful method of suppressing errors in quantum computers - Apr 23, 2009
- If your heart is sound, avoid going in for scans - Feb 11, 2009
- Gene behind several birth defects uncovered - Nov 11, 2008
- A number of Strabismus cases have been found in Iran - May 06, 2009
- Toxic chemical in children's toys may lead to low birth weight in infants - Jun 25, 2009
- Sci-Tech
- age ranges
- cardiac drugs
- childrens hospital
- congenital heart disease
- health care providers
- heart disease
- heart medications
- high risk
- investigators
- johns hopkins
- likelihood
- marlene miller
- mechanisms
- medication
- medication errors
- miscalculation
- misinterpretation
- newborns
- six months
- six years
Posted in Sci-Tech, |