Personal digital assistant-based drug information sources: potential to improve medication safety.
- 1 April 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 93 (2) , 229-36
Abstract
This study compared the potential for personal digital assistant (PDA)-based drug information sources to minimize potential medication errors dependent on accurate and complete drug information at the point of care. A quality and safety framework for drug information resources was developed to evaluate 11 PDA-based drug information sources. Three drug information sources met the criteria of the framework: Eprocrates Rx Pro, Lexi-Drugs, and mobileMICROMEDEX. Medication error types related to drug information at the point of care were then determined. Forty-seven questions were developed to test the potential of the sources to prevent these error types. Pharmacists and physician experts from Creighton University created these questions based on the most common types of questions asked by primary care providers. Three physicians evaluated the drug information sources, rating the source for each question: 1=no information available, 2=some information available, or 3 = adequate amount of information available. The mean ratings for the drug information sources were: 2.0 (Eprocrates Rx Pro), 2.5 (Lexi-Drugs), and 2.03 (mobileMICROMEDEX). Lexi-Drugs was significantly better (mobileMICROMEDEX t test; P=0.05; Eprocrates Rx Pro t test; P=0.01). Lexi-Drugs was found to be the most specific and complete PDA resource available to optimize medication safety by reducing potential errors associated with drug information. No resource was sufficient to address the patient safety information needs for all cases.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evaluation of personal digital assistant software for drug interactionsAmerican Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, 2004
- Nature of preventable adverse drug events in hospitals: a literature reviewAmerican Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, 2003
- Drug‐Information Software for Palm Operating System Personal Digital Assistants: Breadth, Clinical Dependability, and Ease of UsePharmacotherapy: The Journal of Human Pharmacology and Drug Therapy, 2002
- Obstacles to answering doctors' questions about patient care with evidence: qualitative studyBMJ, 2002
- A taxonomy of generic clinical questions: classification studyBMJ, 2000
- Analysis of questions asked by family doctors regarding patient careBMJ, 1999
- The Determinants of Physician Attitudes and Subjective Norms Toward Drug Information Sources: Modification and Test of the Theory of Reasoned ActionPharmaceutical Research, 1997
- How to Prevent Eye Medication ErrorsAmerican Pharmacy, 1992