Intravenous admixtures are the preparations consisting of sterile drug products added to an IV fluid (s) for medication purposes. Especial concerns are required for such drugs since the reversal of toxicity and/or unwanted effects following incompatibilities are cumbersome to deal with. Concern drugs that may cause irritation or toxicity when given as a rapid direct IV injection are also prepared as IV admixtures. The ultimate goal of this assessment was to figure out the actual practices on the ground in IV medications administered in NRH with IV fluids emphasizing on incidence and prevalence of incompatibility between drugs themselves or with IV fluids. This study was a cross-sectional prospective observational study which investigated the potential incompatibilities associated with IV admixture, & the incidence of IV drug administration errors using available evidence-based medicine sources at Nekemte Referral Hospital in West Ethiopia. The data was collected from patient medication Charts and prescription papers for patients treated within a period of 2 months. The study period was from February 2017 to April 2017 at the medical and pediatrics wards of NRH. About patients using IV admixtures were followed within this study period. The prevalence of identified incompatibility among IV admixtures ingredients was 28.94%. The identified compatibility was only 25.43%, while 38.59%were undocumented combinations, and 7.01% were variable. The most commonly encountered incompatible drug-solute combinations were Ringer lactate (61.8%), Insulin + DNS (29.4) and Ceftriaxone + Phenytoin + 0.9% NaCl (8.8%). Also, the incompatible drug-drug combinations detected in this study were Ceftriaxone+ heparin and clopidgrel+cimetidine combinations. Based on the findings of this study, the following can be concluded; there is a high prevalence of incompatibilities among IV admixtures. The types of incompatibilities were both drug-solute and drug-drug incompatibilities. Prescribers and administrators of IV admixtures were recommended to check plausibility before administration to prevent such incompatibilities which can compromise the treatment outcome of patients.
Published in | American Journal of Health Research (Volume 8, Issue 5) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ajhr.20200805.12 |
Page(s) | 84-88 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Science Publishing Group |
IV Admixtures, Incompatibilities, Intravenous, Drugs, Nekemte Referral Hospital
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APA Style
Balisa Mosisa, Bokasa Negeri, Getu Bayisa, Edao Sado, Ginenus Fekadu, et al. (2020). Assessment of Intravenous Drugs Admixtures Incompatibilities at Nekemte Referral Hospital, West Ethiopia. American Journal of Health Research, 8(5), 84-88. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajhr.20200805.12
ACS Style
Balisa Mosisa; Bokasa Negeri; Getu Bayisa; Edao Sado; Ginenus Fekadu, et al. Assessment of Intravenous Drugs Admixtures Incompatibilities at Nekemte Referral Hospital, West Ethiopia. Am. J. Health Res. 2020, 8(5), 84-88. doi: 10.11648/j.ajhr.20200805.12
AMA Style
Balisa Mosisa, Bokasa Negeri, Getu Bayisa, Edao Sado, Ginenus Fekadu, et al. Assessment of Intravenous Drugs Admixtures Incompatibilities at Nekemte Referral Hospital, West Ethiopia. Am J Health Res. 2020;8(5):84-88. doi: 10.11648/j.ajhr.20200805.12
@article{10.11648/j.ajhr.20200805.12, author = {Balisa Mosisa and Bokasa Negeri and Getu Bayisa and Edao Sado and Ginenus Fekadu and Mohammed Gebre and Busha Gamachu and Sagaram Sudhakar}, title = {Assessment of Intravenous Drugs Admixtures Incompatibilities at Nekemte Referral Hospital, West Ethiopia}, journal = {American Journal of Health Research}, volume = {8}, number = {5}, pages = {84-88}, doi = {10.11648/j.ajhr.20200805.12}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajhr.20200805.12}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajhr.20200805.12}, abstract = {Intravenous admixtures are the preparations consisting of sterile drug products added to an IV fluid (s) for medication purposes. Especial concerns are required for such drugs since the reversal of toxicity and/or unwanted effects following incompatibilities are cumbersome to deal with. Concern drugs that may cause irritation or toxicity when given as a rapid direct IV injection are also prepared as IV admixtures. The ultimate goal of this assessment was to figure out the actual practices on the ground in IV medications administered in NRH with IV fluids emphasizing on incidence and prevalence of incompatibility between drugs themselves or with IV fluids. This study was a cross-sectional prospective observational study which investigated the potential incompatibilities associated with IV admixture, & the incidence of IV drug administration errors using available evidence-based medicine sources at Nekemte Referral Hospital in West Ethiopia. The data was collected from patient medication Charts and prescription papers for patients treated within a period of 2 months. The study period was from February 2017 to April 2017 at the medical and pediatrics wards of NRH. About patients using IV admixtures were followed within this study period. The prevalence of identified incompatibility among IV admixtures ingredients was 28.94%. The identified compatibility was only 25.43%, while 38.59%were undocumented combinations, and 7.01% were variable. The most commonly encountered incompatible drug-solute combinations were Ringer lactate (61.8%), Insulin + DNS (29.4) and Ceftriaxone + Phenytoin + 0.9% NaCl (8.8%). Also, the incompatible drug-drug combinations detected in this study were Ceftriaxone+ heparin and clopidgrel+cimetidine combinations. Based on the findings of this study, the following can be concluded; there is a high prevalence of incompatibilities among IV admixtures. The types of incompatibilities were both drug-solute and drug-drug incompatibilities. Prescribers and administrators of IV admixtures were recommended to check plausibility before administration to prevent such incompatibilities which can compromise the treatment outcome of patients.}, year = {2020} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Assessment of Intravenous Drugs Admixtures Incompatibilities at Nekemte Referral Hospital, West Ethiopia AU - Balisa Mosisa AU - Bokasa Negeri AU - Getu Bayisa AU - Edao Sado AU - Ginenus Fekadu AU - Mohammed Gebre AU - Busha Gamachu AU - Sagaram Sudhakar Y1 - 2020/10/23 PY - 2020 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajhr.20200805.12 DO - 10.11648/j.ajhr.20200805.12 T2 - American Journal of Health Research JF - American Journal of Health Research JO - American Journal of Health Research SP - 84 EP - 88 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2330-8796 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajhr.20200805.12 AB - Intravenous admixtures are the preparations consisting of sterile drug products added to an IV fluid (s) for medication purposes. Especial concerns are required for such drugs since the reversal of toxicity and/or unwanted effects following incompatibilities are cumbersome to deal with. Concern drugs that may cause irritation or toxicity when given as a rapid direct IV injection are also prepared as IV admixtures. The ultimate goal of this assessment was to figure out the actual practices on the ground in IV medications administered in NRH with IV fluids emphasizing on incidence and prevalence of incompatibility between drugs themselves or with IV fluids. This study was a cross-sectional prospective observational study which investigated the potential incompatibilities associated with IV admixture, & the incidence of IV drug administration errors using available evidence-based medicine sources at Nekemte Referral Hospital in West Ethiopia. The data was collected from patient medication Charts and prescription papers for patients treated within a period of 2 months. The study period was from February 2017 to April 2017 at the medical and pediatrics wards of NRH. About patients using IV admixtures were followed within this study period. The prevalence of identified incompatibility among IV admixtures ingredients was 28.94%. The identified compatibility was only 25.43%, while 38.59%were undocumented combinations, and 7.01% were variable. The most commonly encountered incompatible drug-solute combinations were Ringer lactate (61.8%), Insulin + DNS (29.4) and Ceftriaxone + Phenytoin + 0.9% NaCl (8.8%). Also, the incompatible drug-drug combinations detected in this study were Ceftriaxone+ heparin and clopidgrel+cimetidine combinations. Based on the findings of this study, the following can be concluded; there is a high prevalence of incompatibilities among IV admixtures. The types of incompatibilities were both drug-solute and drug-drug incompatibilities. Prescribers and administrators of IV admixtures were recommended to check plausibility before administration to prevent such incompatibilities which can compromise the treatment outcome of patients. VL - 8 IS - 5 ER -