Perioperative medication errors among anaesthesia service providers in Namibia - A retrospective survey

dc.contributor.advisorRukewe, Ambrose
dc.contributor.authorOyinbo, O.M.
dc.date.accessioned2025-10-01T08:18:42Z
dc.date.available2025-10-01T08:18:42Z
dc.date.issued2025
dc.descriptionA thesis in partial fulfilment for the requirements for the Degree of Master of Medicine (Anesthesiology, Critical care and Pain management)
dc.description.abstractMedication administration errors are widespread across the healthcare system resulting in huge human and financial costs. Notably, drug administration errors are a major reason for malpractice claim against anaesthesia service providers. The outcomes of medication errors range from no harm and to the grievous events such as intensive care admissions or death, nonetheless they are preventable. The study was aimed to determine the prevalence and characteristics of the common perioperative medication administration errors among anaesthesia service providers in Namibia, identify the contributing factors and assess their outcomes on patients. METHODOLOGY This was a descriptive, retrospective survey among specialist anaesthesiologists, anaesthesia registrars and medical officers across the 34 public hospitals and 18 private hospitals in Namibia over a period of one month. A confidential, self administered structured questionnaire was shared with participants via the email, phone and as a web-based survey. RESULTS Out of 122 questionnaires shared, 112 (92%) anaesthesia providers responded. There were slightly more female participants, 58 (52%) than males and mostly medical officers (56%). Among the respondents, 88 (79%) indicated that they had committed one or more medication errors during their anaesthesia practice. The commonest type was omission (46%), followed by the administration of a wrong drug (27%). In 69% cases, there was no harm to the patients while 6% had HDU/ICU admissions and 1 (0.9%) died. CONCLUSION This index study found a high prevalence of medication administration errors among the practitioners, comparable with many studies. Majority of patients did not suffer any harm. Most respondents blamed the occurrence of errors on distractions/fatigue. It is important to increase awareness and training for prevention as well as set up a nationally coordinated incident reporting system for perioperative drug administration errors in Namibia
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11070/4152
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherUniversity of Namibia
dc.subjectMedication administration errors
dc.subjectPerioperative events
dc.subjectAnaesthesia service providers in Namibia
dc.subjectAssociated factors
dc.subjectOutcomes
dc.subjectNamibia
dc.subjectUniversity of Namibia
dc.titlePerioperative medication errors among anaesthesia service providers in Namibia - A retrospective survey
dc.typeThesis
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