Key Terms
Key Terms
Key Terms
Key Terms
Key Terms
100

Addiction  

compulsive and uncontrollable use of a drug substance for reasons other than prescribed

100

Contaminated product error

when aseptic technique is not followed in compounding, and the drug is no longer sterile and causes a microorganism infection

100

Extra dose error

an error in which more doses are received by a patient than were prescribed by the physician

100

iPLEDGE program

a specific risk assessment program to prevent exposure to isotretinoin, which can cause a high incidence of birth defects if not properly monitored

100

MEDMARX

an Internet-based program of the USP for use by hospitals and healthcare systems for documenting, tracking, and identifying trends for adverse events and medication errors

200

Adverse drug error

occurs when the prescribed drug initiates an allergy or an adverse drug interaction flag that was missed

200

Distraction error

occurs when a technician or pharmacist is interrupted in the middle of a filling process and forgets a portion of key information or train of thought, and some information or a safety decision gets missed

200

Fear error

occurs when a technician fears the consequences of speaking up and asking the pharmacist or the prescriber to double-check an element of the prescription

200

MedGuide

printed information in which the FDA communicates side effects, adverse reactions, and black-box warnings for high-risk drugs

200

MedWatch

a voluntary program by the FDA that allows any healthcare professional or consumer to report a serious adverse event associated with the use of any drug, biologic device, or dietary supplement

300

Adverse drug reaction (ADR)

a negative consequence to a patient from taking a particular drug, due to the nature of the drug itself, for certain vulnerable populations

300

Documentation error

when essential information is not properly noted, such as a prescription, allergy, patient request, or other information in the medication profile, or not properly processing insurance or billing

300

Human failure

 an error generated by failure that occurs at an individual level

300

Medication education error

when the proper medication education materials and counsel are not passed on to the patient or medication administrator

300

Mislabeling error

when a medication has incorrect information on it leading to the wrong use of it, or the wrong patient receiving it

400

Alert fatigue

where the technician and/or the pharmacist starts to have a relaxed attitude and bypasses drug utilization warnings

400

Drug seeker

 a patient who is dependent on or addicted to drugs, who may receive prescriptions for the same or similar controlled drugs from several physicians and pharmacies

400

Incomplete information error

occurs when full information is not available because the patient was not asked sufficient or proper questions, or the answers were somehow not recorded in the profile, or the patient withheld information deliberately or by accident of memory

400

Medication error

any preventable event that may cause or lead to inappropriate medication use or patient harm while the medication is in the control of the healthcare professional, patient, or consumer

400

Omission error

an administration error in which a prescribed dose is not given

500

Capture error

an error that occurs when focus on a task is diverted elsewhere and, therefore, the error goes undetected

500

Drug tolerance

when the body adapts to a drug so that higher doses are needed to produce the same pharmacological effect

500

Incorrect assumption error

occurs when an essential piece of information cannot be verified, and an assumption is made

500

Medication noncompliance

failure to take medication therapy as the physician instructs; also called nonadherence

500

Patient Safety Organizations (PSOs)

groups designed to collect and analyze error data from more than one health provider and offer quality improvement counsel