RESUMO
BACKGROUND: High-alert medications are frequently responsible for adverse drug events and present significant hazards to inpatients, despite technical improvements in the way they are ordered, dispensed, and administered. METHODS: A real-time surveillance application was designed and implemented to enable pharmacy review of high-alert medication orders to complement existing computerized provider order entry and integrated clinical decision support systems in a tertiary care hospital. The surveillance tool integrated real-time data from multiple clinical systems and applied logical criteria to highlight potentially high-risk scenarios. Use of the surveillance system for adult inpatients was analyzed for warfarin, heparin and enoxaparin, and aminoglycoside antibiotics. RESULTS: Among 28,929 hospitalizations during the study period, patients eligible to appear on a dashboard included 2224 exposed to warfarin, 8383 to heparin or enoxaparin, and 893 to aminoglycosides. Clinical pharmacists reviewed the warfarin and aminoglycoside dashboards during 100% of the days in the study period-and the heparinlenoxaparin dashboard during 71% of the days. Displayed alert conditions ranged from common events, such as 55% of patients receiving aminoglycosides were missing a baseline creatinine, to rare events, such as 0.1% of patients exposed to heparin were given a bolus greater than 10,000 units. On the basis of interpharmacist communication and electronic medical record notes recorded within the dashboards, interventions to prevent further patient harm were frequent. CONCLUSIONS: Even in an environment with sophisticated computerized provider order entry and clinical decision support systems, real-time pharmacy surveillance of high-alert medications provides an important platform for intercepting medication errors and optimizing therapy.
Assuntos
Sistemas de Apoio a Decisões Clínicas/organização & administração , Erros de Medicação/prevenção & controle , Serviço de Farmácia Hospitalar/organização & administração , Gestão da Segurança/organização & administração , Aminoglicosídeos/efeitos adversos , Anticoagulantes/efeitos adversos , Comunicação , Humanos , Sistemas Computadorizados de Registros Médicos/organização & administraçãoRESUMO
Dosing errors and inadequate laboratory monitoring of aminoglycosides may lead to significant adverse drug events. Correctly prescribing aminoglycosides requires familiarity with multiple mathematically complicated dosing and laboratory monitoring protocols. We developed a clinical decision support system for ordering aminoglycosides which is integrated into a computerized provider order entry system. To complement the ordering tool, we implemented a real-time tracking application to allow the pharmacist-staffed therapeutic drug monitoring service to follow patients prescribed aminoglycosides.
Assuntos
Aminoglicosídeos/administração & dosagem , Infecções Bacterianas/tratamento farmacológico , Sistemas de Apoio a Decisões Clínicas , Monitoramento de Medicamentos/métodos , Quimioterapia Assistida por Computador/métodos , Sistemas de Registro de Ordens Médicas , Sistemas de Medicação no Hospital , Antibacterianos/administração & dosagem , Humanos , TennesseeRESUMO
The ability to logically engineer novel cellular functions promises a deeper understanding of biological systems. Here we demonstrate the rational design of cellular memory in yeast that employs autoregulatory transcriptional positive feedback. We built a set of transcriptional activators and quantitatively characterized their effects on gene expression in living cells. Modeling in conjunction with the quantitative characterization of the activator-promoter pairs accurately predicts the behavior of the memory network. This study demonstrates the power of taking advantage of components with measured quantitative parameters to specify eukaryotic regulatory networks with desired properties.