For their study, researchers conducted a retrospective analysis of prescribing physicians over a 12-month period using an e-prescribing and communication system. Physicians who use the system may receive low-level, intermediate or high-level warnings and alerts when at risk of making a prescribing error. Researchers measured the number of total alerts and physicians’ responses to those alerts.
Over the one-year period, 381 physicians logged more than 848,000 prescriptions. Researchers identified 895,029 low-level alerts, with a median of 34 percent heeded; 172,434 intermediate alerts, with a median of 23 percent heeded; and 11,940 high-level ‘hard stop’ alerts. Furthermore, physicians responded differently to all levels of alerts. The researchers concluded the correlation between intermediate and high-level alerts is insufficient to identify physicians who are at high risk of making serious prescribing errors.
Read the study about e-prescribing errors.
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