Medication errors in infants at home

The study by Solanki and colleagues involved interviewing 166 parents/grandparents at home regarding the medications that had been prescribed at discharge to their infants, by the hospital staff [1]. As part of the study, the parents were also asked to demonstrate how much medicine they would give....

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Main Authors: Ojha, Shalini, Choonara, Imti
Format: Article
Published: BMJ 2017
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47336/
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author Ojha, Shalini
Choonara, Imti
author_facet Ojha, Shalini
Choonara, Imti
author_sort Ojha, Shalini
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The study by Solanki and colleagues involved interviewing 166 parents/grandparents at home regarding the medications that had been prescribed at discharge to their infants, by the hospital staff [1]. As part of the study, the parents were also asked to demonstrate how much medicine they would give. With this methodology, Solanki et al. estimated that two out of three of the infants in their study would have experienced medication errors at home. This is an alarmingly high proportion of medication errors. Fortunately, none of the infants experienced significant harm. The authors have suggested that this high rate may be due to lack of parental education and inadequate pre-discharge counselling. The study was performed in Pondicherry in India. It would be wrong, however, to dismiss the relevance of their findings when considering the possibility of medication errors among neonates discharged from centres from high income countries, such as the U.K.
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spelling nottingham-473362020-05-04T19:08:03Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47336/ Medication errors in infants at home Ojha, Shalini Choonara, Imti The study by Solanki and colleagues involved interviewing 166 parents/grandparents at home regarding the medications that had been prescribed at discharge to their infants, by the hospital staff [1]. As part of the study, the parents were also asked to demonstrate how much medicine they would give. With this methodology, Solanki et al. estimated that two out of three of the infants in their study would have experienced medication errors at home. This is an alarmingly high proportion of medication errors. Fortunately, none of the infants experienced significant harm. The authors have suggested that this high rate may be due to lack of parental education and inadequate pre-discharge counselling. The study was performed in Pondicherry in India. It would be wrong, however, to dismiss the relevance of their findings when considering the possibility of medication errors among neonates discharged from centres from high income countries, such as the U.K. BMJ 2017-09-20 Article PeerReviewed Ojha, Shalini and Choonara, Imti (2017) Medication errors in infants at home. Archives of Disease in Childhood, 102 . pp. 947-948. ISSN 1468-2044 http://adc.bmj.com/content/102/10/947 doi:10.1136/archdischild-2017-313007 doi:10.1136/archdischild-2017-313007
spellingShingle Ojha, Shalini
Choonara, Imti
Medication errors in infants at home
title Medication errors in infants at home
title_full Medication errors in infants at home
title_fullStr Medication errors in infants at home
title_full_unstemmed Medication errors in infants at home
title_short Medication errors in infants at home
title_sort medication errors in infants at home
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47336/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47336/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47336/