An umbrella review of systematic reviews on contributory factors to medication errors in health-care settings

Expert Opin Drug Saf. 2022 Nov;21(11):1379-1399. doi: 10.1080/14740338.2022.2147921. Epub 2022 Nov 21.

Abstract

Introduction: Medication errors are common events that compromise patient safety and are prevalent in all health-care settings. This umbrella review aims to systematically evaluate the evidence on contributory factors to medication errors in health-care settings in terms of the nature of these factors, methodologies and theories used to identify and classify them, and the terminologies and definitions used to describe them.

Areas covered: Medline, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Embase, and Google Scholar were searched from inception to March 2022. The data extraction form was derived from the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) Reviewers' Manual, and critical appraisal was conducted using the JBI quality assessment tool. A narrative approach to data synthesis was adopted.

Expert opinion: Twenty-seven systematic reviews were included, most of which focused on a specific health-care setting or clinical area. Decision-making mistakes such as non-consideration of patient risk factors most commonly led to error, followed by organizational and environmental factors (e.g. understaffing and distractions). Only 10 studies had a pre-specified methodology to classify contributory factors, among which the use of theory, specifically Reason's theory was commonly used. None of the reviews evaluated the effectiveness of interventions in preventing errors. The collated contributory factors identified in this umbrella review can inform holistic theory-based intervention development.

Keywords: Contributory factors; medication errors; methodology; umbrella review.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Medication Errors* / prevention & control
  • Systematic Reviews as Topic