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Antiparkinsonian Medication Reconciliation as a Strategy to Improve Safety by Preventing Medication Errors

ABSTRACT Background About 70% of neurologists report that PD patients do not get their medication properly when hospitalized, and 33% are prescribed contraindicated drugs. Objectives To execute medication reconciliation (MedRec) focused on antiparkinsonian drugs to identify, characterize and, eventu...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Movement disorders clinical practice (Hoboken, N.J.) N.J.), 2023-07, Vol.10 (7), p.1090-1098
Main Authors: Viudez‐Martínez, Adrián, Ramírez‐López, Ana, López‐Nieto, Javier, Climent‐Grana, Eduardo, Riera, Gerónima
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:ABSTRACT Background About 70% of neurologists report that PD patients do not get their medication properly when hospitalized, and 33% are prescribed contraindicated drugs. Objectives To execute medication reconciliation (MedRec) focused on antiparkinsonian drugs to identify, characterize and, eventually, prevent medication errors, thus promoting therapeutic quality and safety in daily practice. Methods An interventional, single‐center, 1 year, prospective study. All the patients who were hospitalized and had, at least, one active prescription containing an antiparkinsonian drug at hospital admission were included. MedRec was performed by following a three‐phased check: inpatient electronic prescription validation after assessing the outpatient medication schedule, review of the latest clinical report emitted by the Neurology Department/General Practitioner, and pharmacist‐driven interview of the patient and/or caregiver to confirm the information regarding medication gathered. Results A total of 171 admission episodes from 132 patients were registered (February 1, 2021, and January 31, 2022). Of 224 prescription lines involving antiparkinsonian drugs, 179 contained, at least, one medication error (59.8%). Commission errors (91.62%) were more frequent than omitted drugs (8.38%). The most common medication errors were related to timing (41.90%), frequency (21.23%), and dosing (19.55%). The implementation of this program prevented the erroneous administration of 2716 antiparkinsonian doses, 60% of the total number of doses prescribed. Interestingly, a significant relationship between the number of medication errors and having levodopa prescribed was evidenced (P 
ISSN:2330-1619
2330-1619
DOI:10.1002/mdc3.13789