Title of article
Pediatric drug therapy in the emergency department: Does it meet FDA-approved prescribing guidelines?
Author/Authors
Jeffry P. McKinzie، نويسنده , , Seth W. Wright، نويسنده , , Keith D. Wrenn، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages
4
From page
118
To page
121
Abstract
To determine how often Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved age-specific prescribing guidelines were followed in pediatric emergency department (ED) patients, the charts for all children presenting to a university hospital pediatric ED during a 30-day period were reviewed. Of the 359 children who received drug therapy in the ED, 43% received one or more drugs not approved for use at the patientsʹ respective ages. Of 296 children discharged with one or more prescriptions, 16% received a drug prescribed outside of FDA-approved guidelines based on age criteria. Overall, 34% of children who received drug therapy in the ED or by prescription did not meet age-specific FDA-approved prescribing guidelines. The medications most commonly given outside FDA-approved guidelines were bronchodilators, benzodiazepines, and narcotic analgesics. Drug therapy in pediatric ED patients often falls outside FDA-approved prescribing guidelines.
Keywords
drug therapy , drug labeling , pediatrics , child , United States Food Drug Administration
Journal title
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Serial Year
1997
Journal title
American Journal of Emergency Medicine
Record number
779190
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