NPR Takes a Look at Prescription Errors
One way to reduce mistakes is to have doctors enter the prescriptions on a computer instead of with pen and paper. After the switch, hospitals can see error rates drop by a whopping 60 percent.
That's the result of a study, published today in PLoS Medicine, that tracked medication errors in two Australian hospitals before and after installing electronic prescription systems.
For starters, the old saw about doctors having illegible chicken scratches is for real. "People can actually read the prescribing orders now," Johanna Westbrook, director of the Centre for Health Systems and Safety Research at the University of New South Wales and lead author on the study, tells Shots. "You're not relying on trying to interpret handwriting."
That's a 60% drop in prescription errors! The effects of such a reduction would be just as dramatic in terms of a real reduction in healthcare costs. So, why not make the switch?
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