Vancomycin administration: mistakes made by nursing staff.

June 27th, 2008 | by admin |

Vancomycin administration: mistakes made by nursing staff.

AIM: To identify the number and types of errors made by assistant and technical nurses when administering intravenous (IV) vancomycin. METHOD: Preparation and IV administration of 143 doses of vancomycin by 55 assistant and technical nurses were observed in four acute wards (three adult and one paediatric) in a public university hospital in Brazil. Non-participant observers completed a structured checklist for each dose. RESULTS: A total of 27 (19%) doses were administered correctly and 116 (81%) incorrectly. There were 268 errors of four types: (i) incorrect dose; (ii) improper preparation of a dose; (iii) inadequate administration technique; and (iv) infusion at an incorrect rate. For 13 of 143 (9%) doses, errors occurred in all four aspects of administration. Errors were observed on all four wards. CONCLUSION: The high incidence of suboptimal administration of vancomycin observed is a cause for concern. Focused education and safety measures have been introduced and their impact is being evaluated.

Hoefel HH, Lautert L, Schmitt C, Soares T, Jordan S.

School of Nursing, Federal University of the State of Rio Grande do Sul State, Brazil. S.E.Jordan@swansea.ac.uk

Post a Comment

page 70 page 140 page 210 page 280 page 350 page 420 page 490 page 550 page 590 page 690 page 790