what is drug incompatibility?
Answers
Answer:
A medication error is defined as any preventable event that may cause or lead to inappropriate medication use or patient harm while the medication is in the control of the health care professional, patient, or consumer.
According to a review published in 'Drug Safety' magazine in 2007 medication errors occurred in a mean of 5.7% of all episodes of drug administration.
Unintentional administration of anesthetic agents have recently gained awareness for being recognized as a drug error following incidents of residual anesthesia drugs in intravenous lines that caused respiratory arrest followed by cardiac arrest, shortly after the intravenous line was flushed.
Drug Incompatibility is another variation of medication error that refers to an undesirable reaction that occurs between a drug and a solution, container or another drug. Although critically ill patients usually have various central intravenous (i.v.) lines, numerous drugs have to be infused simultaneously through the same lines. This can result in potentially harmful in-line incompatibility that can cause decreased drug effectiveness or increased microparticle load.
Physicochemical incompatibilities of intravenous solutions are major concerns because they may impair the efficacy of the drug or increase the risk for adverse effects. Drug incompatibilities are frequent, accounting for 20% of all medication errors and up to 89% of administration errors. They emerge as color change, clouding, gas formation, turbidity, and precipitation or may lead to invisible chemical reactions, such as pH changes, or complex reactions, which can result in formation of irritating or toxic compounds or reduced bioavailability of the active ingredient.
Explanation:
A medication error is defined as any preventable event that may cause or lead to inappropriate medication use or patient harm while the medication is in the control of the health care professional, patient, or consumer.
According to a review published in 'Drug Safety' magazine in 2007 medication errors occurred in a mean of 5.7% of all episodes of drug administration.
Unintentional administration of anesthetic agents have recently gained awareness for being recognized as a drug error following incidents of residual anesthesia drugs in intravenous lines that caused respiratory arrest followed by cardiac arrest, shortly after the intravenous line was flushed.
Drug Incompatibility is another variation of medication error that refers to an undesirable reaction that occurs between a drug and a solution, container or another drug. Although critically ill patients usually have various central intravenous (i.v.) lines, numerous drugs have to be infused simultaneously through the same lines. This can result in potentially harmful in-line incompatibility that can cause decreased drug effectiveness or increased microparticle load.
Physicochemical incompatibilities of intravenous solutions are major concerns because they may impair the efficacy of the drug or increase the risk for adverse effects. Drug incompatibilities are frequent, accounting for 20% of all medication errors and up to 89% of administration errors. They emerge as color change, clouding, gas formation, turbidity, and precipitation or may lead to invisible chemical reactions, such as pH changes, or complex reactions, which can result in formation of irritating or toxic compounds or reduced bioavailability of the active ingredient.