Academic Pediatrics
Volume 10, Issue 4 , Pages 233-237, July 2010

Using Pharmacy Data to Screen for Look-Alike, Sound-Alike Substitution Errors in Pediatric Prescriptions

  • William T. Basco Jr., MD, MS

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence to William T. Basco, Jr, MD, MS, Division of General Pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina, 135 Rutledge Avenue, MSC 561, Charleston, South Carolina 29425.
  • ,
  • Myla Ebeling
  • ,
  • Thomas C. Hulsey, MSPH, ScD
  • ,
  • Kit Simpson, DrPH

Department of Pediatrics, College of Medicine (Dr Basco, Mrs Ebeling, and Dr Hulsey) and Department of Health Administration and Policy, College of Health Professions (Dr Simpson), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC

Received 16 September 2009; accepted 27 April 2010. published online 14 June 2010.

Objective

The aim of this study was to pilot test a screening approach to detect potential look-alike, sound-alike (LASA) errors in pediatric outpatient prescriptions.

Method

Medicaid pharmacy claims from one state were reviewed. From a list of LASA drug pairs, we identified candidate pairs meeting the following criteria: 1) one drug was commonly prescribed in children; 2) the paired drug was uncommonly prescribed for children; and 3) both drugs were available as oral preparations only, resulting in 11 LASA pairs. We identified patients who usually received one drug in a pair, then presented with a first dispensing of the paired drug, representing a “screening alert” for potential LASA error. We determined a “true error” as any patient who triggered a screening alert, received only one dispensing of the paired drug in the subsequent 6 months, and had no diagnoses supporting the dispensing of the paired drug.

Results

Among the 22 test drugs, there were 1 420 091 prescriptions to 173 005 subjects. There were 395 screening alerts generated, representing a screening alert frequency of 0.28 screening alerts per 1000 prescriptions. We identified 43 true LASA errors. In the dataset, the overall LASA error rate is estimated to be approximately 0.00003%, or 0.03 LASA errors per 1000 prescriptions.

Conclusion

Prescription dispensing patterns can be used to screen for LASA errors in pediatric prescriptions. The rates of pediatric LASA errors appear to be much lower than other types of pediatric medication errors and may be best addressed by automated processes.

Key Words: children, patient safety, prescription error

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PII: S1876-2859(10)00113-0

doi:10.1016/j.acap.2010.04.024

Academic Pediatrics
Volume 10, Issue 4 , Pages 233-237, July 2010