Title
The use of electronic medication reconciliation to establish the predictors of validity of computerized medication records.
Abstract
Medication records in clinical information systems (CIS) are frequently inaccurate, leading to potentially incorrect clinical decisions and preventing valid decision support interventions. It is not known what characteristics of electronic medication records are predictive of their validity. We studied a dataset of 136,351 electronic medication records of patients admitted to two academic hospitals that were individually validated by admitting providers using novel medication reconciliation software. We analyzed the relationship between characteristics of individual medication records and the probability of record validation using a multivariable linear regression model. Electronic medication records were less likely to be validated if more time had passed since their lost update (14.6% for every 6 months), if they represented an antiinfective (61.6%) or a prn (50.9%) medication, or if they were in an outpatient CIS rather than on an inpatient discharge medication list (18.1%); p < 0.0001 for all. Several characteristics of electronic medication records are strongly associated with their validity. These findings could be incorporated in the design of CIS software to alert providers to medication records less likely to be accurate.
Year
DOI
Venue
2007
10.3233/978-1-58603-774-1-1022
Studies in Health Technology and Informatics
Keywords
Field
DocType
clinical information systems,electronic medical records,medications
Information system,Data mining,Medication Reconciliation,Psychological intervention,Decision support system,Project commissioning,Medicine
Conference
Volume
Issue
ISSN
129
Pt 2
0926-9630
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
1
0.43
1
Authors
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Alexander Turchin16012.60
Tejal K. Gandhi214631.56
Christopher M. Coley372.46
Maria Shubina4203.91
Carol A. Broverman57127.95