Health & Medical Children & Kid Health

Medication Problems May Spur Many Child ER Trips, Study Finds

Medication Problems May Spur Many Child ER Trips, Study Finds By Amy Norton

HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Feb. 2, 2015 (HealthDay News) -- Medication-related problems -- from side effects to improper use -- may be the cause of many kids' trips to the emergency room, a new study suggests.

Researchers found that at one Canadian children's hospital, medication-related problems accounted for one in 12 ER visits over a year. And about two-thirds of those incidents were preventable, the researchers concluded.

The findings, published online Feb. 2 in Pediatrics, do not mean that parents should be afraid to give their children needed medications, the researchers noted.

Instead, parents -- and older kids -- should have a "clear understanding" of why a medication is being prescribed and how to use it properly, said lead researcher Peter Zed, a pharmacist and associate professor at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada.

His team found that allergic reactions and drug side effects were commonly behind pediatric ER visits. But so was prescription misuse -- such as when kids did not use their asthma medication properly or, in the case of type 1 diabetes, did not take their insulin.

When children have chronic medical conditions or multiple conditions treated by more than one doctor, it's especially important for parents to ask questions about medication use, Zed said.

A pharmacist who was not involved in the study agreed.

"It's good for parents to ask questions," said Laura Pizzi, a professor at Jefferson School of Pharmacy in Philadelphia.

Busy doctors may not delve into all the details of a medication's proper use or potential risks, Pizzi said. So parents should feel free to question either their child's doctor or the pharmacist who fills the prescription, she said.

The study findings are based on more than 2,000 children and teenagers -- average age 6 -- who arrived at a pediatric ER in Halifax, Nova Scotia over the course of a year. Overall, about 8 percent were considered to have "medication-related" symptoms.

Adverse drug reactions were the culprit 26 percent of the time, while "non-adherence" to a prescription was to blame in 17 percent of cases. Another 19 percent of kids were not taking a high enough medication dose, and in 12 percent of cases, an "improper" drug was prescribed, the study found.

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