Medication Administration Errors

1530 Words4 Pages

In today’s current fast-paced and demanding field of heath care, medication administration has become complex and time-consuming task. Approximately one-third of the nurses’ time is used in medication administration. There is much potential for error because of the complexity of the medication administration process. Since nurses are the last ones to actually administer the medication to the patient therefore they become responsible for medication administration errors (MAE). Reasons for MAE may include individual factors, organizational factors or system factors. This paper will discuss the root causes analysis of MAE and strategies to prevent them. Root Causes – Fishbone Diagram Communication Wieman TJ and Wieman EA (2004) demonstrates communication factors that result in MAE. They say that nurses’ failure to question unclear orders or pursue concerns because of intimidation by prescriber (physician or pharmacist) contributes to these errors. Illegible handwritten orders and ambiguous orders written in MARs or patient profiles further contribute to these medical errors. Moreover, other factors that also contribute are an incomplete medication orders such as missing dose or route, abbreviations misunderstood (Appendix B) (Davis N.M., 2005), and spoken orders misheard. According to Cohen M.R. (2007), nurses’ who contributes to MAE fail to identify the patient (checked ID band, allergy band, MAR sheet), unable to share correct information during the shift report and ineffective communication. In the above methadone case scenario, the nurse was unable to communicate adequately with the physician and her co-workers. She failed to question the physician about the transcription error (dosage error). She did not apply the “Five me... ... middle of paper ... .../AssessERR.pdf Parker, M. E. (2006). Nursing theories and nursing practice (2nd ed.). Philadelphia: F.A. Davis Company. Rogers, A.E., Hwang, W.T., Scott, L.D., Aiken, L.H., & Dinges, D.F. (2004). The working hours of hospital staff nurses and patient safety. Health Affairs, 23(4), 202-212. Tang, F.I., Sheu, S.J., Yu, S., Wei, I.L., & Chen, C.H. (2007). Nurses relate the contributing factors involved in medication errors. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 16(3), 447-457.Retrived form EBSCOhost. Wakefield, B. J., Holman, T. U., & Wakefield, D. S. (2005). Development and Validation of the Medication Administration Error Reporting Survey. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality . Retrieved from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK20599/#N0x1a52fc0N0x5b8ac78 Wieman TJ, Wieman EA. A systems approach to error prevention in medicine. J Surg Oncol. 2004; 88 (3): 115-21.

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