Article

Computerized Surveillance for Adverse Drug Events in a Pediatric Hospital

Department of Pediatrics, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO; Department of Internal Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO; BJC Healthcare, Center for Healthcare Quality and Effectiveness, St Louis, MO; St Louis Children's Hospital, St Louis, MO
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association DOI:10.1197/jamia.M3167 pp.607-612

ABSTRACT There are limited data on adverse drug event rates in pediatrics. The authors describe the implementation and evaluation of an automated surveillance system modified to detect adverse drug events (ADEs) in pediatric patients. The authors constructed an automated surveillance system to screen admissions to a large pediatric hospital. Potential ADEs identified by the system were reviewed by medication safety pharmacists and a physician and scored for causality and severity. Over the 6 month study period, 6,889 study children were admitted to the hospital for a total of 40,250 patient-days. The ADE surveillance system generated 1226 alerts, which yielded 160 true ADEs. This represents a rate of 2.3 ADEs per 100 admissions or 4 per 1,000 patient-days. Medications most frequently implicated were diuretics, antibiotics, immunosuppressants, narcotics, and anticonvulsants. The composite positive predictive value of the ADE surveillance system was 13%. Automated surveillance can be an effective method for detecting ADEs in hospitalized children.

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Keywords

ADE surveillance system
 
ADEs
 
adverse drug event rates
 
adverse drug events
 
anticonvulsants
 
Automated surveillance
 
automated surveillance system
 
children
 
composite positive predictive value
 
detecting ADEs
 
effective method
 
large pediatric hospital
 
medication safety pharmacists
 
Medications
 
Potential ADEs
 
screen admissions
 
severity
 
yielded 160 true ADEs