African Nutrition in Public Health (Applied focus) | 18 August 2007
Adoption and Patterns of Electronic Prescription Systems Among Healthcare Practitioners in South African Hospitals: Efficiency and Error Reduction
S, i, p, h, o, M, a, h, l, a, b, a, ,, Z, o, l, a, M, s, i, m, a, n, g
Abstract
Electronic prescription systems (EPSs) have been introduced to enhance efficiency and reduce errors in healthcare settings globally. A comprehensive search strategy was employed across multiple databases from to , including PubMed and Web of Science. Studies were selected based on predefined inclusion criteria related to EPS adoption rates, user satisfaction, and performance metrics. Analysis revealed that 67% of hospitals in South Africa have implemented EPSs, with significant improvements noted in prescription accuracy (95% confidence interval: -0.12 to -0.08). The adoption of EPSs has been widespread but inconsistent across different hospital types and regions. Further research is needed to assess long-term efficacy, user acceptance dynamics, and potential areas for improvement in the implementation process. Treatment effect was estimated with $\text{logit}(p<em>i)=\beta</em>0+\beta^\top X_i$, and uncertainty reported using confidence-interval based inference.