#1 Nursing Resource: 30,000 Nurses Visiting Daily

Log in   Sign up   Why join?   | Layout: Switch to narrow layout Color: gold style blue style rose style
Nursing Community for Nurses
Home Forums Articles Specialty Students Region Career Resources

Advanced Search Site Help Site Map

JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence



Currently Online
Members: 104
Guests: 848
952

Job Spotlight
Oncology Nurse RN
Southlake, Texas
Forum Spotlight
Oncology Nursing

Nursing Degrees

Nursing Articles

Imagine.
Am I Meant To Be A Nurse?
Nurse
Health Website Analysis: allnurses.com
They Call Me The Swamp Nurse
Submit An Article

Nursing Jobs

Job Seeker: Employer:

Newsletter

Subscribe to the free allnurses.com email newsletter. We will keep you informed of nursing news, articles, discussions, and more.

Enter your email address:

Read current:
Nursing Newsletter

How-To allnurses

allnurses videos

Welcome to allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses

The largest most active online nursing community. Join 294,669 nurses from around the world to learn, communicate, and network. For full allnurses.com access, register today - it's free! Problems during registration? Please don't hesitate to contact support.

Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #21  
Old Jul 12, 2006, 03:39 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2003
Re: JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

Once again, I think the answer is more nurses. I can't help but think that some of these less flagrant errors can be attributed to too many patients and not enough time.

Top
  #22  
Old Jul 13, 2006, 09:41 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2006
Re: JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

Originally Posted by Geeg
Once again, I think the answer is more nurses. I can't help but think that some of these less flagrant errors can be attributed to too many patients and not enough time.
Adding more staff can help but it won't solve the entire problem. As I thought about this thread I realized that many of these may have not been done by the nurse.

How often could a family member mistakenly hook a loose line up because "It must go somewhere."?

Also, aides and techs might be responsible for some of the connections.

I showed this article to my wife who has been a nurse for 27 years. She didn't doubt that these things could happen. One time in a LTC facility one of her LPNs inserted a vaginal suppository into the patient's belly button.

Top
  #23  
Old Feb 14, 2007, 08:11 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2007
Re: JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

Good lord, I can't even imagine how some of those examples even happened! I mean, how exactly does one not notice that they are attaching an IV tubing to a trach, or a tube feed to a foley/central line? Are the people who do this graduates of 2 week distance education nursing courses? Yikes!

Top
  #24  
Old Apr 01, 2007, 01:56 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Re: JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

so sad to know that there will always be stupid things happening in the nursing practice.how such things occured were really irrational,lack of experience,practice,familliarization of works and equipments..etc???? come on.we are dealing with HUMAN's life....its not a simple paper works, once you done it wrong you could just scrampled it and throw.

Top
  #25  
Old Apr 01, 2007, 07:41 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2007
Re: JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

Concerning the misconnections. Questions, arise on the nature of the unit in which this happened. Understaffing and overworked, Rn's are tired and stressed. The shame is that all this happened in the first place. I am not convinced that it happened under properly skilled alert RNs. The hospital, unit manager or staffing coordinator, I think may bear some responsibility.

Top
  #26  
Old May 28, 2007, 02:41 AM
Emmanuel Goldstein's Avatar
Oh Goody!
Join Date: May 2007
Re: JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

Obviously many issues at play here. Fatigue, understaffing, high patient acuity, etc.

Regarding the tube feeding into the IV line... our GI docs started using a new PEG tube that had a luer lock and needed a feeding line that looked very much like an IV line. Scared the crap out of me, as I envisioned just this scenario. I labeled the hell out of it. People laughed and thought I was being paranoid, but in 23 years I've seen some stupid things.

Top
  #27  
Old Aug 25, 2007, 10:00 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2003
Re: JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

Originally Posted by pawashrn View Post
Concerning the misconnections. Questions, arise on the nature of the unit in which this happened. Understaffing and overworked, Rn's are tired and stressed. The shame is that all this happened in the first place. I am not convinced that it happened under properly skilled alert RNs. The hospital, unit manager or staffing coordinator, I think may bear some responsibility.
As a RN ONLY YOU are responsible for your practise. You have people's lives in your hands. By god if you are too tired, overworked, intoxicated on drugs or alcohol, or are in too much of a hurry then you better not be giving medications especially through central lines. The hospital, manager, etc... are not responsible for that life, you are. That is why we are taught the 5 rights and that is why we MUST practise it.

Top

The following members say Thank You:
  #28  
Old Aug 28, 2007, 12:50 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Re: JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

In our ICU we had a Nurse give a bolus of K+! Thankfully nothing happend to the pt.....She hooked it up DIRECTLY to the primary tubing! NO PUMP!

Top

The following member says Thank You:
  #29  
Old Oct 04, 2007, 09:54 AM
NRSKarenRN's Avatar
Co-Administrator
Join Date: Oct 2000
Re: JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

10/07 more news:

More Patient Deaths from Luer Misconnections

Top
  #30  
Old Oct 04, 2007, 07:18 PM
elizabells's Avatar
ECMO junkie
Join Date: Feb 2005
Re: JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

I would have been the first to agree that it's stupidity/impairment UNTIL it nearly happened to me. In our NICU it's not uncommon for someone to use 60" microbore luer-lock med tubing instead of an enteral feed extension set because the former is usually easier to find. A 6Fr NGT is just the right size for that microbore tubing. So yeah, I once ALMOST hooked up a breast milk feed to an IV while on orientation. I caught it, but I almost didn't. And I was neither stupid nor high. Never change a feed syringe and a med syringe at the same time, kiddies.

Now I'm the tubing Nazi. I go a little crazy looking for those *&&^((* enteral extension sets that actually don't fit as well and have to be taped on to go with our PEG fittings. Oh, and even those have luer-locks at the syringe end. We don't even stock non-luer syringes on my floor. Oh, and JCAHO is coming next week. This should be fun...

Top
Remove this ad - Upgrade your Membership Sponsored Links
 
Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.



Currently Active Users Viewing: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search



New To Site?
Need Help?

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 05:23 AM.

JCAHO Alert: Tubing misconnections—a persistent and potentially deadly occurrence

Copyright © 1996-2008, allnurses.com. All rights reserved.  allnurses.com, Inc. Advertising Information