FROM THE FOUNDATION

The Social Life of Health Information

A new Pew Internet/CHCF national survey finds the Internet has joined doctors and family members as one of the top three ways people search for answer to their health care questions.

Mapping Physician Supply in California

This report presents the first comprehensive study of the Medical Board of California survey data on practicing physicians in the state. It finds fewer M.D.s than previously estimated and a wide variation in supply among counties.

Restructuring Options for Community Clinics

Concerned about their long-term survival, some California community clinics are considering partnerships or mergers. This issue brief offers a roadmap for restructuring.

Prescription Drugs

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Report Lays Out Recommendations To Curb Medication Errors

A state panel on Tuesday released a report calling for physicians to use electronic prescribing technology and for legislators to adopt other strategies to reduce medication errors, the Sacramento Bee reports.

The Medication Errors Panel was created through legislation by former Sen. Jackie Speier (D-San Mateo) (Lin, Sacramento Bee, 3/7). The panel produced the report through funding from the California HealthCare Foundation and the Kaiser Family Foundation. The Pharmacy Foundation of California managed the funding (California Pharmacists Association release, 3/6).

The panel consisted of health care, consumer advocacy and academic representatives.

Recommendations from the report included:

  • Adding the purpose of a pill to a prescription label;
  • Labeling bottles in different languages;
  • Creating a public education campaign; and
  • Establishing a state-funded pilot project to collect data on the prevalence of medication errors at pharmacies in California.
Speier estimated that up to "150,000 California lives are jeopardized every year through injuries and/or deaths" because the Legislature has not made an effort to reduce medication errors (Sacramento Bee, 3/7).

Kim Belshé, secretary of the Health and Human Services Agency, said in a statement that some of the report's recommendations already are included in Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's (R) health care reform proposal. Belshé said Schwarzenegger's proposal seeks to reduce medical errors by:
  • Pushing hospitals and clinics to adopt by 2008 safety measures related to infection control, surgical errors and adverse drug events;
  • Enacting new reporting requirements; and
  • Establishing an Office of Patient Safety within the Department of Public Health (Office of the Governor release, 3/6).
The California HealthCare Foundation is the publisher of California Healthline.



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