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Pharmacists in Emergency Rooms Reduce Medication Errors Medication errors can happen in all clinical settings. However, the busy environment and fast-paced care offered in the emergency room (ER) in hospitals enhance the probability of errors. No matter how trained and experienced the emergency room physicians may be, they can likely make mistakes resulting in serious injuries that may complicate an existing medical condition or lead to death. Prescription errors account for nearly 7,000 deaths per year in the ER. In most cases, medication errors happen due to poor physician handwriting, doubt over drug names and measurements, and poor packaging designs. With an objective to find a feasible solution for this rising problem, ER physicians are requesting a pharmacist to be present in the room so that they can help to review each medication given and ensure correct dosage. A new study reports that the Children’s Hospital in Dallas has put in ten pharmacists on staff role in the emergency department who review each medication and ensure that it’s the right one prescribed in the correct dosage. The primary aim of this new initiative is to lessen the risks of adverse events and to reduce costs. Often, the emergency room is a high risk area wherein several medications (different doses) are given to the patients instantaneously.