2022, Número 2
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Rev Cubana Farm 2022; 55 (2)
Intervenciones para los procesos de dispensación y comunicación en hospitales universitarios
Gallego-Suárez L, Jaramillo CD, Moreno-Chaparro J, Larrotta-Castillo D, Veloza-García CC, Gaitán-Duarte H, Estrada-Orozco K
Idioma: Español
Referencias bibliográficas: 46
Paginas: 1-37
Archivo PDF: 996.17 Kb.
RESUMEN
Introducción: La dispensación y comunicación de órdenes médicas en hospitales son
subprocesos importantes para la prevención o manejo de errores de medicación. A pesar de
la evidencia, no existen datos concluyentes que detallen intervenciones en hospitales
universitarios, sus resultados comparados, seguridad de uso o procesos para implementarlos.
Objetivo: Sintetizar la evidencia disponible sobre la implementación de estrategias de
intervención para la mejora de los procesos de dispensación y comunicación de órdenes en
hospitales universitarios.
Métodos: Se realizó una revisión sistemática de la literatura en las bases de datos Medline
(PubMed), EMBASE, The Cochrane Library, LILACS y recursos adicionales como Google Scholar. La síntesis de datos se llevó a cabo a través de la descripción de la intervención,
efectividad, seguridad y los resultados de la implementación.
Conclusiones: Las intervenciones identificadas incluyen tecnologías novedosas y
modalidades tradicionales que en parte responden a los objetivos de prevención y gestión de
errores médicos en los subprocesos analizados en hospitales universitarios, pero conllevan
a la necesidad de profundizar en los análisis de cara a la implementación, uso e innovación
en el área.
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