mail
editor@ajptr.com
whatsapp
9409046853
logo

American Journal of PharmTech Research

Published

A Prospective Study On Adverse Drug Reactions In General Medicine Department In A Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital

Published in December 2013 Issue 6 (Vol. 3, Issue 6, 2013)

A Prospective Study On Adverse Drug Reactions In General Medicine Department In A Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital - Issue cover

Abstract

The field of patient’s drug safety has been receiving great deal of attention, since adverse drug reaction has been recognized as hazards of drug therapy. Adverse drug reactions are a great cause of concern to the healthcare professionals, patients and the pharmaceutical industry. However, may times it goes undetected and ignored by the patients and healthcare professionals. Hence we took a prospective observational study to analyse the Adverse Drug reactions among all patients admitted in general medicine department in Justice KS Hegde Charitable Hospital, Mangalore. The study was carried out for a period of eight months from September 2012 to April2013. The suspected adverse drug reactions were later analysed for their causality, severity and preventability by using the different adverse drug reaction assessment scales. A total of 640 cases has been followed and 47 Adverse Drug Reactions has been reported from the 40 patients during the study period. Male predominance was noted over females in case of total number of patients. Majority Adverse Drug Reactions were in the age group 70-79(31.91%). The most common class of drugs involved in adverse drug reactions is Antibiotics (17.39%) followed by Antihypertensive 7(15.21%). The most common system involved in adverse drug reaction is Digestive system (19.36%) followed by dermatological system (13.04%). Out of the 47 adverse drug reactions reported, 53% were probable, 45% were possible and 2% were unlikely. The severity assessment done by using the Hartwig and Seigel scale indicate that majority of the ADRs were ‘Mild’ followed by moderate and severe respectively. The preventability assess shows that most of ADRs are Probably Preventable 28(59.57%) followed by Not preventable 16(34.04%) and definitely preventable 3(6.38%). Monitoring and reporting of adverse drug reactions in the hospital is one of the best method to identify the causality between exposure to the drug and the occurrence of adverse drug reaction. Proper education and training to the healthcare professional’s towards ADR reporting will have a positive attitude towards continuous reporting and improving patient safety.

Download Article

PDF

Best for printing and citation

File size: 0.0 MB
Format: PDF

Download Article

PDF

Best for printing and citation

File size: 0.0 MB
Format: PDF

Article Information

Article ID:
AJPTR36047
Paper ID:
AJPTR-01-000095
Published Date:
2013-12-01

Article Impact

Views:2,527
Downloads:1,784

How to Cite

shareef & Vincen & C.S.Shastry (2013). A Prospective Study On Adverse Drug Reactions In General Medicine Department In A Tertiary Care Teaching Hospital. American Journal of PharmTech Research, 3(6), xx-xx. https://ajptr.scholarjms.com/articles/921

Article Actions

Whatsapp