Title of article :
Medication Appropriateness in Prehospital Care
Author/Authors :
Ramadanov, Nikolai Center for Emergency Medicine - University Hospital Jena - Friedrich Schiller University - Am Klinikum 1, 07747 Jena - Germany , Klein, Roman Orthopaedics - Trauma Surgery and Sports Traumatology - Marienhaus Hospital Hetzelstift - Stiftstr. 10, 67434 Neustadt - Germany , Daniel Aguilar Valdez, Abner Center for Internal Medicine - Clinic for Endocrinology and Diabetology - Ernst von Bergmann Hospital Bad Belzig - Niemegker Str. 45, 14806 Bad Belzig - Germany , Behringer, Wilhelm Center for Emergency Medicine - University Hospital Jena - Friedrich Schiller University - Am Klinikum 1, 07747 Jena - Germany
Abstract :
Background. (e aim of the present study was to determine the medication appropriateness (MA) in prehospital emergency physician deployments according to the hospital discharge diagnosis and to investigate the factors influencing the MA. Methods. (e MA was determined by a systematic comparison of the administered medication in prehospital emergency physician deployments with the
discharge diagnosis in a period of 24 months at the emergency medical services in Bad Belzig. Categorial variables for the specialty, medical
educational status, and approval for emergency medicine of prehospital emergency physicians were examined univariate for relations with
the MA, using the χ2 test with the significance level of p � 0.05. Results.(e MA was present in 69% (n� 488) cases. (e MA was present
in 64% of cases by specialists and in 71% by resident physicians (p � 0.04). (e specialty and the approval for emergency medicine of the
prehospital emergency physician did not show significant results. MA was present in 46% (n� 100) of cases with incorrect diagnoses, and
it was present in 79% (n� 388) of cases with correct diagnoses by the prehospital emergency physician (p � 0.01). In cases of missing MA,
224 drugs and 23 different drugs were administered by the prehospital emergency physician. Conclusions. (e MA in prehospital
emergency physician deployments shows a necessity for improvement with 31% medication errors. Incorrect diagnoses by the prehospital
emergency physician seem to lead to medication errors in prehospital emergency physician deployments. (e necessary standards and
guidelines for administration of drugs should be taken into account in educational courses.(e wide-ranging emergency medical training
and the rapid accumulation of operational experience seem to play a crucial role for correct administration of medication in the prehospital emergency physician deployments.
Keywords :
Medication Appropriateness , Prehospital Care , MA , prehospital emergency physician deployments
Journal title :
Emergency Medicine International