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The Annals of Pharmacotherapy: Vol. 26, No. 7, pp. 897-901.
© 1992 Harvey Whitney Books Company.
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Research Articles

Narcotic use in the hospital: reasonably safe?

JK Whipple, RK Ausman, and EJ Quebbeman

OBJECTIVE: To determine the causes and frequency of overdoses associated with the administration of opioid analgesics in hospitalized patients. DESIGN: Case series. SETTING: Two acute care teaching hospitals. PATIENTS: Eighty-one hospitalized patients who received naloxone for a clinically suspected narcotic overdose. INTERVENTIONS: Three investigators reviewed each patient who received naloxone during a 12-month period. The patients were judged to have a narcotic overdose if caregivers documented an immediate improvement in mental status, respiratory rate, or blood pressure after naloxone administration. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: The number and causes of narcotic overdoses were determined. The frequency of morphine and meperidine overdoses was calculated. The number of incidents reported using incident or adverse drug reaction reports or the appropriate International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) code. RESULTS: In the 22 overdoses that occurred, 14 (64 percent) were caused by medication prescribing, compounding, or administration errors and potentially were preventable. The remaining eight patients experienced an overdose despite receiving appropriate amounts of opioids. The frequency of overdoses was 0.4 and 0.2 percent of total patients receiving morphine or meperidine, respectively, at the two hospitals. Nonreporting of these narcotic overdoses was frequent. In one hospital, 1 incident report and 3 adverse drug reactions were reported for 17 overdoses. At the second hospital, 1 incident report and 1 adverse drug reaction were reported for 6 overdoses. None of the patient charts included an ICD-9-CM code that documented the problem. CONCLUSIONS: The causes of overdoses are not limited to prescribing and administration errors. Some patients, despite proper execution of appropriate orders, develop a narcotic overdose. Caregivers must be aware of this problem and monitor patients for a decrease in mental status and respiratory rate. In addition, we conclude that an important number of hospitalized patients develop an overdose even though the frequency is low related to the number of patients receiving narcotics.


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L. Radbruch, R. Sabatowski, F. Petzke, A. Brunsch-Radbruch, S. Grond, and K. A Lehmann
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[Abstract] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1992 by Harvey Whitney Books Company.