At Saince, we build the technological foundation that empowers providers to focus entirely on their patients. By seamlessly integrating artificial intelligence, cloud-native infrastructure, and deep system interoperability, we are eliminating inefficiencies and bringing clinical information, radiology, and hospital management into the modern era. We are not just a service provider—we are a high-tech innovation engine for the healthcare industry.

USA: 5490 McGinnis Village Place, Suite 116, Alpharetta, GA 30005.
+1 888 472 4623 | sales@saince.com
INDIA: Corporate Address: #6-3-1090, Ground Floor, Block B, TSR Towers, Raj Bhavan Road, Somajiguda, Hyderabad, Telangana 500082.
Registered Address: #202, Shatabdi Residency, Ramnagargundu, Hyderabad, Telangana 500044.
+91 40 6728 5555 | sales@saince.in
Contact Us
Address 5490 McGinnis Village Place, Suite 116, Alpharetta, GA 30005.
Follow Us

Clinical documentation, imaging and intelligence solutions.

Blog Details

Blogs
Survey finds that EHRs many times do not catch medication errors May 19, 2016

Survey finds that EHRs many times do not catch medication errors

A recent survey report released last month by Leapfrog Group found that many EHR systems do not catch medication errors. Almost 40 percent of potentially harmful drug orders weren’t flagged as dangerous by the systems, Leapfrog found. These included medication orders for the wrong condition or in the wrong dose based on things like a patient’s size, other illnesses or likely drug interactions. Meanwhile, systems missed about 13 percent of errors that could have killed patients. Medication errors can often times cause serious harm to patients – and even death. Many hospitals try to prevent them with the use of electronic health records (EHR) systems. But these methods are far from foolproof, according to this new report. According to 2015 figures from the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, about 1 of every 20 patients in hospitals suffers harm because of medications. Of those, the agency estimates, half are avoidable. Meanwhile, in a push to improve patient safety and health care quality, the federal government has been encouraging hospitals to adopt electronic health records — particularly with medication ordering systems — thanks to parts of the 2009 stimulus package and 2010 health reform. But there’s been pushback from many doctors and advocates, who say design issues can make the software difficult to use or even counterproductive.