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. 2012 Oct 23;69(4):995–1008. doi: 10.1007/s00228-012-1435-y

Table 1.

Studies describing prescribing errors

Country (Setting) Type of study Duration Sample Outcome Reference
Israel (General hospital) Prospective, prescriptions were reviewed in pharmacy. 6 months 14,385 prescriptions 160 MEs were detected; 97 (60.6 %) were prescribing errors; Incorrect dosage (44) was the most common type. [14]
Bahrain (Primary care) Prospective, prescriptions were collected by pharmacists. 2 weeks 77,511 prescriptions 7.7 % of prescriptions contained errors; Omission errors (93.6 %), Commission errors (6.3 %). [15]
Iran (Teaching hospital) Prospective, prescriptions from elderly patients were collected. 4 months 3000 prescriptions 829 (27 %) patients received at least one inappropriate prescription; 746 (24 %) patients had at least one medicine prescribed in duplicate. [22]
Bahrain (Primary care) Prospective, prescriptions for infants were collected by pharmacists. 2 weeks 2282 prescriptions 90.5 % of prescriptions contained errors; 74.5 % of medications contained drug errors; Dosing frequency was incorrectly written in 20.8 % and dose strength was incorrectly in 17.7 %. [16]
Palestine (General hospital) Prospective, all patients with creatinine clearance ≤59 ml/min were included, data were collected from patients’ files. 4 months 78 patients 63 (80 %) patients were having at least one inappropriate medication; 1.5—fold greater than the recommended dose, poor knowledge of pharmacokinetics of prescribed drug. [23]
Egypt (Teaching hospital, ICU) Prospective, direct observation by pharmacist was conducted to record medication-related problems. 1 year 220 patients 619 medication-related problems were detected in 213 patients; Incorrect dosing (22 %) was the most common errors in ICU. [24]
Bahrain (Primary care) Prospective, iron prescriptions for infants were collected and reviewed by pharmacist. 2 weeks 2,282 prescriptions 159 prescriptions included iron preparation; 56 out of 159 were issued without dosage forms and duration of therapy. [17]
Iran (Teaching hospital) Prospective, drug order sheets in nephrology ward were reviewed by clinical pharmacist. 4 months 76 patients (818 medications) 86 (10.5 %) prescribing errors were detected in 46 of the admissions; wrong frequency (37.2 %), wrong dose (19.8 %) and overdose(12.8 %) were the most common types of errors. [18]
Saudi (Primary care) Prospective, prescriptions were reviewed in public and private centres NR 600 prescriptions 64 (72 %) physicians were classified as writing low-quality prescriptions [25]
Saudi (Teaching hospital) Prospective, medication charts and orders data collected by pharmacists 1 month 1582 medication order 113 (7.1 %) prescribing errors were detected; Wrong strength 39 (35 %) followed by wrong dose frequency 26 (23 %). [26]
Saudi (Primary care) Prospective, all medication prescriptions were analysed. 1 working day 5299 prescriptions 990 (18.7 %) prescribing errors identified; 8 (0.15 %) prescribing errors had serious effect on the patients. [27]
Bahrain (Primary care) Prospective, prescriptions issued by the residents were collected by pharmacists 1 year 2692 prescriptions 2372 (88 %) prescriptions had errors; total number of errors was 7139; Incorrect dose and wrong dose frequency (24.7 %) of errors. [19]
Israel (Teaching hospital) Prospective, case–control study 18 months 274 patients 137 MEs were identified; 63 (46 %) errors were prescribing. [20]
Saudi (Teaching hospital) Retrospective, all prescriptions obtained from pharmacy were analysed by physicians and pharmacists. 1 year 3796 prescriptions 94 % of prescriptions had no quantity indicated; 90.7 % of prescriptions had incomplete instructions for patients. [28]
Iran (Paediatric hospital) Retrospective, hospital information-based study. 6 months 898 medical charts Incomplete information in 74 % of medication orders; Time of drug administration not reported in 47.8 % of medical charts. [29]
Israel (Teaching hospital, ED) Retrospective, charts review was performed by two physicians for adult patients transferred by ambulance. 1 year 471 patient charts 24 (12.7 %) of 188 patients receiving drugs in vehicle were subject to MEs; In ED 120 (36 %) of 332 patients were subject to MEs. [30]
Saudi (Tertiary hospital, PICU & paediatric wards) Retrospective of paediatric physicians medication orders. 5 weeks 2,380 medication orders 1,333 MEs were reported; 1,051 (78.8 %) errors were potentially harmful; Incidence rate was 56 per 100 medication order; Dose errors were the highest incidence (22 %). [21]
Saudi (General Hospital) Medical records were reviewed for adult patients. 2 years 2627 patient files 3963 MEs were identified; 60 % of patient files contained one error; 30 % of patient files contained two errors, and 3 errors or more found in 10 % of patient files. Wrong strength was reported in 914 patients (35 %). [31]
Israel (Not applicable) Questionnaire NR N/A 18 % of doctor orders were written according to the hospital standard; 3 % of doctors and 25 % of nurses were the rate of compliance in ED. [32]
Israel (Not applicable) Structured questionnaire sent to active physicians to evaluate the rates and types MEs that they had encountered. NR 627 physicians 470 (79 %) physician made an error in prescribing; 376 (63 %) physicians made more than one error; 94 (16 %) physicians made one error. [33]
Saudi (Primary care) Self—administered questionnaire designed to explore factors influencing prescribing. NR 87 physicians 47 (54 %) physicians believed that limited knowledge of pharmacology is a main cause of prescribing errors; 65 % of physicians had not received training in drug prescribing; 34 % of physicians had consulted a pharmacist before drug prescribing. [34]

MEs: Medication Errors; NR: Not Reported, N/A: Not Available.