Zahra Karimian
1,2, Mehrnaz Kheirandish
1*, Naghmeh Javidnikou
1, Gholamreza Asghari
1, Fariba Ahmadizar
3,1, Rassoul Dinarvand
41 Department of Assessment and Control on Prescribing and Use of Medicines and Health-Related Products, Iran Food and Drug Administration, Ministry of Health and Medical Education, Tehran, Iran.
2 Department of Pediatrics, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
3 Department of Epidemiology, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
4 Department of Pharmaceutics, School of Pharmacy, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran.
Abstract
Medication errors are the second most common cause of adverse patient safety incidents and the single most
common preventable cause of adverse events in medical practice. Given the high human fatalities and financial
burden of medication errors for healthcare systems worldwide, reducing their occurrence is a global priority.
Therefore, appropriate policies to reduce medication errors, using national data and valid statistics are required.
The primary objective of this study was to provide a national ‘characteristic profile’ of medication error-associated
adverse drug reactions (ADRs), which are also known as preventable ADRs (pADRs). A retrospective study of pADR
reports submitted to the national pharmacovigilance center (PCV) within Iran’s Food and Drug Administration
was conducted over a 2-year period (2015-2017). Preventability Method (P-Method), which is a standardized tool
developed and recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), was used for preventability assessment.
The results of the analyses revealed that while the number of pADRs increased from year one to two (601 to 630),
their proportion out of all ADRs per year decreased (7.32% to 6.44%). The percentage of pADRs was higher in
females (61.01%) and adults (83.27%), and the highest number of reports were received by nurses (71.57%). Having
‘a documented hypersensitivity to an administered drug or drug class’ was the most common preventable factor
in both years (61.23% and 54.29% respectively), and ‘anti-infectives used systemically’ were the medication class
which primarily contributed to both serious (53.29%) and non-serious pADRs (39.19%). The specific characteristics
of medication errors associated with ADRs from this study, especially the preventable criteria which led to their
occurrence, can help devise more specific preventative policies.