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Parenteral Nutrition: a Call to Action for Harmonization of Policies to Increase Patient Safety

Overview
Journal Eur J Clin Nutr
Date 2020 Jun 12
PMID 32523089
Citations 4
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Abstract

Unsafe medication practices and medication errors are leading causes of injury and avoidable harm worldwide and are highest in vulnerable groups. In 2017, the World Health Organization launched the third Medication Without Harm Global Patient Safety Challenge to try to reduce risks related to medical treatment. Parenteral nutrition (PN) is in the unique position that, although licensed products are available from manufacturers, formulas may be prepared ad hoc for first-line use that might not be subject to the same regulatory oversight. Safety issues around PN can arise through lack of harmonization in practices, misinterpretation and product unfamiliarity and can occur at any stage from prescription to preparation to administration. Government legislation and regulation vary considerably, with PN not explicitly handled in many countries. We therefore call on policy leaders in all countries to establish policies that ensure patient safety, and that these include PN along with medicines. The available evidence supports obtaining industry prepared PN as first-line therapy for reasons of safety, primarily, and of cost. If a suitable industry prepared ready-to-use PN is not available, standardized all-in-one PN admixtures should be the next line of care, with individualized PN being reserved for patients whose complex nutritional needs cannot be met using standardized admixtures.

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Medication errors related to high-alert medications in a paediatric university hospital - a cross-sectional study analysing error reporting system data.

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Offering Guidance and Learning to Prescribers to Initiate Parenteral Nutrition using a Validated Electronic Decision TREE (OLIVE TREE).

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Cost-Consequences Analysis of Increased Utilization of Triple-Chamber-Bag Parenteral Nutrition in Preterm Neonates in Seven European Countries.

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