Drug-Related Hospital Admissions
- 1 July 1993
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Annals of Pharmacotherapy
- Vol. 27 (7-8), 832-840
- https://doi.org/10.1177/106002809302700702
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To review and summarize studies reporting rates of drug-related hospital admissions. DATA SOURCES: Manual and computerized literature searches using MEDLINE, Index Medicus, and International Pharmaceutical Abstracts as databases (key words: Drug, drug-related, or iatrogenic; admission, hospital admission, or hospitalization; and ADR or adverse drug reaction). References from retrieved articles were searched to locate further studies. STUDY SELECTION: Included were English-language studies of humans admitted to the hospital because of medications. Problems investigated were admissions prompted by adverse drug reactions (ADRs) when drugs were used by the patient and admissions resulting from a patient's noncompliant or unintentionally inappropriate drug use. Excluded were cases involving drug abuse, alcoholism, suicide attempts, intoxication, or inadequate prescribing. DATA SYNTHESIS: Between 1966 and 1989, ADR rates from 49 hospitals or groups of hospitals in a variety of international settings were published in 36 articles. Sample sizes ranged from 41 to 11 891 patients, with a median of 714 (interquartile range [IQR] 275-1245) and a mean of 1412 (SD 2233). The prevalence of reported admissions resulting from ADRs ranged from 0.2 to 21.7 percent; the median was 4.9 percent (IQR 2.9–6.7 percent) and the mean was 5.5 percent (SD 4.1 percent). The weighted meta-analytic estimate was 5.1 percent (95 percent confidence interval 4.4–5.8). Of those ADR admissions, 71.5 percent were side effects, 16.8 percent excessive effects, 11.3 percent hypersensitivity reactions, and 0.4 percent idiosyncratic; 3.7 percent of patients admitted for ADRs died. Eleven reports indicated that 22.7 percent of ADR hospitalizations were induced by noncompliance. CONCLUSIONS: Drug-induced hospitalizations account for approximately five percent of all admissions. Results apply only to people from highly developed industrialized countries. Economic analyses have not been performed. Future research should include the Third World and nonindustrialized nations as well as specific cultural groups.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Meta-analysis for combining Bayesian probabilitiesMedical Hypotheses, 1991
- Drug use before hospital admission in ZimbabweEuropean Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1988
- Adverse drug reactions and drug non-compliance as primary causes of admission to a cardiology departmentEuropean Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1988
- Contribution of adverse drug reaction to admission rates in an acute psychiatric wardActa Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1985
- The Role of latrogenic Disease in Admissions to Intensive CareJAMA, 1980
- ADVERSE REACTIONS TO PRESCRIBED DRUGS IN THE ELDERLY: A MULTICENTRE INVESTIGATIONAge and Ageing, 1980
- CAN ADVERSE DRUG REACTIONS BE PREVENTED?Adverse Drug Reaction Bulletin, 1980
- Hospital Admissions Due to Adverse Drug ReactionsThe American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1979
- Adverse drug reactions leading to hospitalization in childrenThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1976
- Intensive Hospital Monitoring of Adverse Reactions to DrugsBMJ, 1969