Definition of the challenge
A major concern or challenge of ABC hospital is a recent incident of medication administration error in its emergency room (ER) which almost resulted in the death of a 55-year-old female patient. This is a case of medication administration through the wrong route. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) defines a medication error as "any preventable event that may cause or lead to inappropriate medication use or patient harm while the medication is in the control of the health care professional, patient, or consumer. Such events may be related to professional practice, health care products, procedures, and systems, including prescribing; order communication; product labeling, packaging, and nomenclature; compounding;
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She was found to have edema of the throat with a mild stridor upon inspiration. She was later placed on supplemental oxygen and prescribed a 0.5 mg dose of epinephrine. The epinephrine was administered by intravenous (IV) infusion and shortly after the patient was complaining of chest pains on her left side with tingling in her fingertips. Her condition began to deteriorate and after further intervention she became stable. Investigation of the incident revealed that while 0.5 mg dose of epinephrine was ordered, the route of administration was not specified and the nurse incorrectly administered the epinephrine IV instead of intramuscular …show more content…
One of the factors associated with the epinephrine-related medication errors is its availability in different concentrations, namely 1:1,000 and 1:10,000. Healthcare practitioner must be aware of the various concentrations, what these concentrations mean, and which concentration is appropriate for specific situations. There is also the possibility of misreading the concentration because of all the zeros. Other errors associated with epinephrine-related medication errors are misreading of labels and concentrations, accidental overdose as a result of miscommunication between health care professionals, inadequate knowledge of appropriate dosing, and miscalculation of doses (Lieberman et. al, 2005).
While this type of incident is common in the hospital as FDA reported that nearly 300,000 preventable adverse events occur in United States (U.S) hospitals and many of them are as a result of confusing medication information (FDA, 2009). This incident however caused a stir at ABC Hospital prompting the Board of Directors and Governing Council to convene an emergency meeting to discuss the challenge and how to prevent future
Medication errors in the hospital setting have significant potential to result in serious injury and even death, thus effecting patients, families, health care professionals, and hospitals. Approximately 400,000 adverse drug effects (ADE) occur each year (Institute of Medicine, 2006). Considering that not all medication errors are discovered and reported, this number is likely to be underestimated. These errors not only contribute to patient morbidity and mortality, but also cause increased length of stay and hospital expenses. It is estimated by the Institute of Medicine (IOM) that $3.5 billion is spent annually as a result of ADEs (IOM, 2006).
For the purposes of this integrative review, an acute care setting is defined as an adult general medicine medical surgical unit. The expected outcome of the integrative review will be to discover a strategy, intervention, or protocol that can be implemented within the project leader’s healthcare organization to support a sustained change. Upon dissemination and implementation of the findings, a systematic evaluation can be conducted to determine the positive or negative outcomes of the intervention. Each year in the U.S., serious preventable medication errors occur in 3.8 million inpatient admissions and 3.3 million outpatient visits. The Institute of Medicine, in its report To Err Is Human, estimated 7,000 deaths in the U.S. each year are due to preventable medication errors. Inpatient preventable medication errors cost approximately $16.4 billion annually. Outpatient preventable medication errors cost approximately $4.2 billion annually. Dosing errors make up 37 percent of all preventable medication errors. Drug allergies or harmful drug interactions account for 11 percent of preventable medication errors. Preventable medication reconciliation errors occur in all phases of care: 22 percent during admissions, 66 percent during transitions in care and 12 percent during discharge. Approximately 100 undetected dispensing errors can occur each day as a result of the significant volume of medications
One of the standards that has been implemented is Standard 4: Medication Safety. The Australian Commission implemented this standard with the intention of ensuring that competent clinicians safely prescribe, dispense and administer appropriate medicines to informed patients and monitor the effect. (Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care, 2012) In healthcare, one of the most common treatments is medication. As a result of this, there are many incidences of error, many more than any other healthcare interventions. According to the Patient Safety Network (PS Network, 2015) medication errors account for nearly 700,000 emergency department visits and 100,000 hospitalizations each year. Medication errors are often a result of the unsafe and poor quality practice of healthcare professionals or system errors. Medication errors are costly and many are avoidable. For this standard
Medication errors are preventable and cause great harm to the patients and their families. Every year in Australian hospitals, medication errors occur as nurses do not follow the 9 rights of medication administration. The 9 rights are right patient, drug, route, time, documentation, response, action and form (Fossum et al., 2016). Medication errors can be caused by
Each year, roughly 1.5 million adverse drug events (ADEs) occur in acute and long-term care settings across America (Institute of Medicine [IOM], 2006). An ADE is succinctly defined as actual or potential patient harm resulting from a medication error. To expound further, while ADEs may result from oversights related to prescribing or dispensing, 26-32% of all erroneous drug interventions occur during the nursing administration and monitoring phases (Anderson & Townsend, 2010). These mollifiable mishaps not only create a formidable financial burden for health care systems, they also carry the potential of imposing irreversible physiological impairment to patients and their families. In an effort to ameliorate cost inflation, undue detriment, and the potential for litigation, a multifactorial approach must be taken to improve patient outcomes. Key components in allaying drug-related errors from a nursing perspective include: implementing safety and quality measures, understanding the roles and responsibilities of the nurse, embracing technological safeguards, incorporating interdisciplinary collaborative efforts, and continued emphasis upon quality control.
The purpose of this paper is to bring forth awareness when it comes to patients and medication errors and further educates health care professionals on the importance of communication especially during transition of care. According to Williams and Ashrcoft (2013) “ An estimated median of 19.1 % of total opportunities for error in hospitals.” Although not all medication errors occur during transition it is the time most prevalent for these errors to occur. As per Johnson, Guirguis, and Grace (2015) “An estimated 60% of all medication errors occur during transition of care. The National Transitions of Care Coalition defines a transition of care as the movement of patients between healthcare locations, providers, or different levels of care within the same location as their conditions and care needs change, [and] frequently involves multiple persons, including the patient, the family member or other caregiver(s), nurse(s), social worker(s), case manager(s), pharmacist(s), physician(s), and other providers.”
New research estimates up to 440,000 Americans are dying annually from preventable hospital errors. This puts medical errors as the third leading cause of death in the United States, underscoring the need for patients to protect themselves and their families from harm, and for hospitals to make patient safety a priority (Hospital Errors are the Third Leading Cause of Death in United States (n.d). This is a staggering statistic and shows the need for immediate changes in the administration of medications.
Errors made while administering medications is one of the most common health care errors reported. It is estimated that 7,000 hospitals deaths yearly are attributed to medication administration errors.
Medication errors are the leading cause of morbidity and preventable death in hospitals (Adams). In fact, approximately 1.5 million Americans are injured each year as a result of medication errors in hospitals (Foote). Not only are medication errors harmful to patients but medication errors are very expensive for hospitals. Medication errors cost America’s health care system 3.5 billion dollars per year (Foote).Errors in medication administration occurs when one of the five rights of medication administration is omitted. The five rights are: a) the right dose, b) the right medication, c) the right patient, d) the right route of administration, and e) the right time of delivery (Adams). Medication administration is an essential part of
In 2011, over 3,800 of these “never events” where reported to the Joint Commission (psnet, n.d.). Being an Administrator in a hospital setting, it is import to know what SRE’s mostly occur. Many of the SRE’s reported in 2011 were linked to surgical events such as wrong-site surgery, air embolism, death or disability due to medication errors, patient suicide and environmental events such as fires, which can harm anyone in the facility (psnet, n.d.). 8.2% of the serious reportable events reported to the joint commission where medication errors, nearly 600 reports are medication errors. This happens when a patient dies or is seriously injured due to a medication error such as being administered the wrong drug or the wrong dose, it was given to the wrong patient, at the wrong time or wrong rate or had the wrong preparation, or wrong route of administration (psnet, n.d.). Mediation errors are the most important or relevant to hospital setting
“According to the Institute of Medicine’s Preventing Medication Errors report, the average hospitalized patient is subject to at least one medication error per day” (Barnsteiner, 2008, p. 2-459). A patient’s home medication regimen is frequently continued during hospitalization. It is often found that during the process of interviewing a patient to collect all relevant data associated with their medication history, over 60% of inpatients had at least one error on their prior to admission medication list (Salanitro et al., 2012). The many challenges and current inability to accurately identify medications taken at home can lead to potential adverse events. “An adverse drug event (ADE) is defined as harm experienced by a patient as a result
Medication errors are a major issue affecting patient safety in hospitals, which can create deadly consequences for patients. It is crucial to identify and analyzed medication errors so healthcare professionals can pinpoint why medication errors occur and provide insight into how to prevent or reduce them.
For many patients the scariest part of being in the hospital is having to rely on other people to control your life changing decisions. One large part of this is the medications one is given while in our care. I can only imagine what it must be like for patients to have a stranger to come in and start administering drugs to me. This would be especially scary if I did not know what these medications did, or what negative effects could be caused by taking them. Unfortunately, the fear of medication errors that many patients have are not unfounded. Estimates range from 1.5 to 66 million patients a year have medication errors occur while they are in the care of health care professionals. Considering all of the technology we have at our
According to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA 2009), the wrong route of administrating medication accounts for 1.3 million injuries each year. An article published in September issue of the Journal of Patient Safety estimates there are between 210,000 and 400,000 deaths per year associated with medical errors. This makes medical errors the third leading cause of deaths in the United States, behind that comes heart disease and cancer. To prevent medical errors always follow the Three Checks and most importantly the Rights of Medication Administration. The “Rights of Medication Administration” helps to ensure accuracy when administering medication to a patient. When administering medication the administer should ensure they have the Right Medication, Right Patient, Right Dosage, Right Route, Right Time, Right Route, Right Reason, and Right Documentation. Also remember the patient has the right to refuse, assess patient for pain, and always assess the patient for signs of effects.
The National Patient Safety Agency (NPSA 2010), defines a drug error as ‘any preventable event that may cause or lead to inappropriate use of patient harm. Although not all drug errors have lead to patient harm it is important to recognise that if a mistakes has been