Articles on
Pharmacy Design
"Impact of Interruptions and Distractions on Dispensing
Errors in an
Ambulatory Care Pharmacy", (c) Flynn EA, Barker KN, Gibson
JT, Pearson RE, Berger BA, Smith LA, American Journal
of Health System Pharmacy, June 2009
Abstract:
A
possible association between interruptions and
distractions and the occurrence of dispensing errors was
investigated. Fourteen pharmacists and 10 technicians in
an ambulatory care pharmacy at a general medical-surgical
hospital were tested for distractibility by using the
group embedded figures test (GEFT) as well as for visual
acuity and hearing. They were videotaped as they filled
prescriptions during a 23-day period in 1992.
A study
investigator compared each filled prescription with the
physician's written order, noted details of deviations,
verified with the pharmacist any errors that occurred, and
asked the pharmacist to correct the error if necessary.
Interruptions and distractions were detected and
characterized by reviewing the videotapes. None of the
study participants had significant hearing or visual
impairment. There was a significant association between
GEFT scores and error rates. A total of 5072 prescriptions
were analyzed, and 164 errors were detected, for an
overall error rate of 3.23%.
Wrong
label information was the most common type of error (80%
of errors detected). A total of 2022 interruptions (mean
+/- S.D. per half hour per subject, 2.99 +/- 2.70) and
2457 distractions (mean +/- S.D. per half hour per
subject, 3.80 +/-3.17) were detected. The error rate for
sets of prescriptions with one or more interruptions was
6.65% and for sets during which there were one or more
distractions, 6.55%.
Interruptions and distractions per half hour were both
significantly associated with errors. In an ambulatory
care pharmacy, interruptions and distractions over a
half-hour period were associated with dispensing errors, a
majority of which involved incorrect label information. |