Author Topic: Robot designed to reduce pharmacy errors  (Read 793 times)

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Offline megimoo

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Robot designed to reduce pharmacy errors
« on: April 26, 2008, 09:38:30 PM »
CHICAGO -- U.S. hospitals are starting to use pharmacy robots designed to eliminate life-threatening medication errors, Loyola University Hospital says.

The Chicago hospital said it is the first in the Midwest to use the PillPick, a two-armed robot that places single doses of medication in small plastic bags marked with a bar code to identify the drug. A nurse can scan the bar code on the medication bag along with the bar code on the patient's wrist band. The computer will sound an alert and an pop-up warning will appear if it is the wrong drug or...snip

The $1.5 million robot is manufactured by SwissLog Healthcare Solutions.

Loyola said the robot is designed to eliminate the type of serious human error involving actor Dennis Quaid's twins at a California hospital last year. The infants were supposed to receive 10 units per millimeter of the blood thinner heparin. Instead they received 10,000 units.


http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/Science/2008/04/26/robot_designed_to_reduce_pharmacy_errors/9885/