Background and aims In December 2012 electronic prescribing (EP) and administration of medicines was introduced to the Trust (800 beds, 40 paediatric beds, 3 Paediatric HDU beds, 20 admissions/day) as a pilot - specifically to the Child Health Department - before general adoption across the Trust. Methods Pre-implementation, training was thoroughly and carefully organised for 40 paediatricians, 60 nurses and 5 pharmacists. Training was face to face and then on-line with face to face support. Mobile computing devices were distributed to the ward areas. All in-patient paper prescriptions were transcribed to electronic systems and paper prescriptions were removed. Ward based 24 h pharmacist/nurse support was available for the first week. Results All prescriptions were legible. Antibiotic stewardship easily audited - prescriptions with stop/review date 50%/indication 33% vs. 86%/80% respectively after an educational programme in child health. No paediatric patients have been given a medication to which they were known to be allergic after implementation of EP. Dispensary error rates from electronic prescription orders reduced from 5.38/month to 1.5/month post-implementation. Only 25% of paediatric staff would go back to paper prescriptions. The system is now adopted across most of the Trust. Conclusions Departmental involvement in planning was most important as was "buy-in" from the junior doctors and nursing staff. Well organised training for all staff, intensive and face-to-face, is felt to be essential. EP has been accepted and is a safer system which enables audit of practice down to individual levels. Outpatient use is planned in the future.
CITATION STYLE
Dale, P., & Munyard, P. (2014). PO-0976 Prescribing In The Electronic Age: Faster, Safer, Better? Archives of Disease in Childhood, 99(Suppl 2), A570.1-A570. https://doi.org/10.1136/archdischild-2014-307384.1594
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