Hospitals to test medicine technology
GHS will do trials
of company's safety system
Published: Wednesday, October 11, 2006 -
6:00 am –
By Liv
Osby
HEALTH WRITER
losby@greenvillenews.com
Greenville Hospital System will be the test
site for a new technology aimed at reducing medication errors that will be
produced at a new company lured to
Medication errors occur more often than
many people realize and kill thousands of Americans every year. In fact, a
hospital patient can expect to be subjected to more than one medication error
every day, according to a recent report from the
An automated medication cart and bar code
verification software system produced by Sabal Medical Inc. is being developed
to help change that.
Sabal is relocating to
"By enticing high-impact technologies
like Sabal Medical to relocate to the state, SCRA is fostering the growth of
the knowledge economy," said Bill Mahoney, CEO of SCRA. "This seed investment
will continue to pay dividends by spurring growth and development in
biotechnology."
The carts and accompanying software control
access to medication storage on the hospital floor, Sabal CEO Bill Park said.
They are connected to a secure computer system that in turn is linked to the
hospital, providing information about the patient, the orders, and the nurse,
and then dispensing the right medication, he said.
Each cart is designed for six patients on a
typical medical-surgical unit, or for one to two patients on an intensive care
unit, Park said. To be fully operational with the system, a 300-bed hospital
would need 50 carts, he said. Each cart and software costs $15,000, he said.
"Medication errors cost an extra
$4,000 per admission on average," he said, "and 38 percent of
medication errors are at the bedside where the nurse administers the medications
to the patient."
The Sabal system will cut down on
medication errors, Park said, although he didn't have an estimate of how much.
"Safety is such an important
issue," said GHS CEO Michael Riordan, noting that the test puts the
hospital in a position to help incubate the knowledge economy. "And GHS
benefits by being able to offer patients the latest care advances."
Within five years, Sabal expects to employ
about 50 at its