Drug
Tracking: FDA Could Make Bar Codes Practical
Industrial
Labeling > Safety >
Drug Tracking
By Marianne
Kolbasuk McGee
From Information
Week, May 19, 2003
When Sutter
Health uses a drug-tracking system based on bar-code scanning,
it adds about 5 cents to each dose of medicine. That's $1.6
million a year, given the 32 million doses its hospitals administer.
Nevertheless,
over the next three years Sutter is rolling out to each of
its 33 hospital campuses a computerized drug system based
on bar codes. It's using Bridge Medical Inc.'s system, which
prints a bar code that can be placed on single-dose packages.
But if
a Federal Drug Administration rule is finalized requiring
drugmakers to put bar codes on medicine bound for hospitals,
Sutter CIO John Hummel predicts that per-dose cost will fall
to 1 cent. That, combined with the safety benefits, might
be low enough to spark adoption at hospitals around the country.
Developing
and deploying the system will cost Sutter about $18 million,
about $500,000 per facility, and is part of a larger $50 million
technology initiative through 2006 that includes an electronic
intensive-care unit. The investment is a sign of how health-care
companies are getting more comfortable investing in technology.
"The board approved this $50 million for technology fairly
quickly," Hummel says. "In the past, for many health-care
companies, it could've taken three to six years."
The Department
of Veterans Affairs medical system pioneered the use of bar-code
drug tracking, starting a pilot back in 1994 and rolling it
out nationwide in 1999 and 2000. The system works like this:
Before a patient gets a drug, the medicine's bar code is scanned,
as are the patient's ID bracelet and nurse's ID badge. The
information is checked against the patient's electronic medical
records to ensure that it's the correct medicine, dose, and
time, and to double-check possible allergies or adverse drug
interactions. The system also can be used to check blood types
before transfusions and to track lab specimens.
The workload
on understaffed nurses is only one reason for such a system.
The number of drugs available has grown 500% in the past decade
to more than 17,000 in North America, according to a 2002
research paper by Dr. Michael Cohen of the Institute for Safe
Medication Practices.
Sutter's
Hummel says the bar-code systems will be vital in protecting
patients from mistakes, since about half of adverse reactions
happen because someone is given the wrong drug.
Studies
of VA hospitals found more than a 75% improvement in errors
related to wrong medication, patient, or timing. As the cost
of creating such a system drops, more hospitals will find
those kind of results within their reach.
(Reprinted, with permission from Information
Week, May 19, 2003 issue, copyright 2003, CMP Media, LLC)
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