Practical guide to bar coding for patient medication safety.

Bar coding for the medication administration step of the drug-use process is discussed. FDA will propose a rule in 2003 that would require bar-code labels on all human drugs and biologicals. Even with an FDA mandate, manufacturer procrastination and possible shifts in product availability are likely to slow progress. Such delays should not preclude health systems from adopting bar-code-enabled point-of-care (BPOC) systems to achieve gains in patient safety. Bar-code technology is a replacement for traditional keyboard data entry. The elements of bar coding are content, which determines the meaning; data format, which refers to the embedded data and symbology, which describes the "font" in which the machine-readable code is written. For a BPOC system to deliver an acceptable level of patient protection, the hospital must first establish reliable processes for a patient identification band, caregiver badge, and medication bar coding. Medications can have either drug-specific or patient-specific bar codes. Both varieties result in the desired code that supports patient's five rights of drug administration. When medications are not available from the manufacturer in immediate-container bar-coded packaging, other means of applying the bar code must be devised, including the use of repackaging equipment, overwrapping, manual bar coding, and outsourcing. Virtually all medications should be bar coded, the bar code on the label should be easily readable, and appropriate policies, procedures, and checks should be in place. Bar coding has the potential to be not only cost-effective but to produce a return on investment. By bar coding patient identification tags, caregiver badges, and immediate-container medications, health systems can substantially increase patient safety during medication administration.

[1]  C. Thompson FDA to develop rules for mandatory bar-code labels. , 2002, American journal of health-system pharmacy : AJHP : official journal of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.

[2]  Marilyn M. Anderson,et al.  Research Paper: Evaluating the Capability of Information Technology to Prevent Adverse Drug Events: A Computer Simulation Approach , 2002, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[3]  J E Smith,et al.  Use of bar codes in inpatient drug distribution. , 1991, American journal of hospital pharmacy.

[4]  D. Bates,et al.  The Costs of Adverse Drug Events in Hospitalized Patients , 1997 .

[5]  Longe Km The status of bar coding in hospitals: a survey report. , 1989 .

[6]  Emily S. Patterson,et al.  Research Paper: Improving Patient Safety by Identifying Side Effects from Introducing Bar Coding in Medication Administration , 2002, J. Am. Medical Informatics Assoc..

[7]  Bar-code technology for documenting administration of large-volume intravenous solutions. , 1989, American journal of hospital pharmacy.

[8]  E. Nold,et al.  Bar codes and their potential applications in hospital pharmacy. , 1985, American journal of hospital pharmacy.

[9]  K. McGovern 10 GOLDEN RULES FOR ADMINISTERING DRUGS SAFELY , 1988, Nursing.

[10]  Candice Willette,et al.  Using BCMA software to improve patient safety in Veterans Administration Medical Centers. , 2002, Journal of healthcare information management : JHIM.

[11]  L. Kohn,et al.  To Err Is Human : Building a Safer Health System , 2007 .

[12]  A trial of the use of bar code technology to restructure a drug distribution and administration system. , 1991, Hospital pharmacy.

[13]  Potential use of bar codes to implement automated dispensing quality assurance programs. , 1985, Hospital pharmacy.

[14]  F. Puckett,et al.  Medication-management component of a point-of-care information system. , 1995, American journal of health-system pharmacy : AJHP : official journal of the American Society of Health-System Pharmacists.