Impact of automated pop-up alerts on simultaneous prescriptions of antimicrobial agents and metal cations
Takanori Matsumoto, Taichi Matsumoto, Chiyo Tsutsumi, Yoshiro Hadano

TL;DR
Pop-up alerts in hospital systems reduced harmful co-prescriptions of antibiotics and metal cations, improving drug safety and reducing resistance risks.
Contribution
Implementation of dual pop-up alerts in hospital systems to reduce co-intake of antimicrobial agents and metal cations.
Findings
Pop-up alerts reduced co-intake prescriptions from 84.5% to 29.5% over two years.
Pharmacist interventions increased from 3.4% to 28.2% after alert implementation.
Tetracycline-containing prescriptions showed the most significant reduction.
Abstract
Antimicrobial agents (AMAs) are essential for treating infections. A part of AMAs chelate with metal cations (MCs), reducing their blood concentrations. That drug-drug interaction could lead to a reduction of therapeutic efficacy and the emergence of drug-resistant bacteria. However, prescriptions ordering concomitant intake (co-intake) of AMAs and MCs are frequently seen in clinical settings. A method for preventing such prescriptions is urgently needed. We implemented pop-up alerts in the hospital's ordering and pharmacy dispensation support system to notify the prescriptions ordering co-intake of AMAs and MCs for physicians and pharmacists, respectively. To assess the effectiveness of the pop-up alerts, we investigated the number of prescriptions ordering co-intake of AMAs and MCs and the number of pharmacist inquiries to prevent co-intake of AMAs and MCs before and after the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPharmacy and Medical Practices · Electronic Health Records Systems · Pharmaceutical Practices and Patient Outcomes
