Background. Hospital admissions due to adverse drug events (ADEs) are expensive, and many may be preventable, yet few institutions have ongoing surveillance for these events. Objective. To evaluate the use of a computer-based ADE monitor to identify admissions due to ADEs and to measure the associated costs. Design. Prospective cohort study in one tertiary care hospital. Participants. All patients admitted to nine medical and surgical units in a tertiary care hospital over an 8-month period. Main outcome measure. Admissions to the hospital due to an adverse drug event. Methods. A computer-based monitoring program generated alerts suggesting that an ADE might be present. A trained reviewer then evaluated the record. Results. Among the 3238 admissions, 76 (2.3%, 1.4% after adjusting for sampling) were found to be caused by an ADE. Of these ADEs, 78% were severe and 28% were preventable. Estimated costs were $16,177 per ADE, and $10,375 per preventable ADE: annualized costs to the hospital were $6.3 million per year for all ADEs, and $1.2 million for preventable ADEs. Conclusions. Many admissions were caused by ADEs, although our point estimate undoubtedly represents a lower bound. These events were mostly severe, often preventable, and expensive. The computer-based monitoring system represents a practical approach for identifying ADEs that occur in outpatients and cause admission to the hospital. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Jha, A. K., Kuperman, G. J., Rittenberg, E., Teich, J. M., & Bates, D. W. (2001). Identifying hospital admissions due to adverse drug events using a computer-based monitor. Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety, 10(2), 113–119. https://doi.org/10.1002/pds.568
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.