How does your facility handle Lidocaine?

Nurses General Nursing

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Specializes in Emergency.

Hello everyone, I just have a few comments/questions about Lidocaine.

At my ER, we usually would draw up 1% Lidocaine, buffer it with bicarb, and label syringes and put them away in a locked cabinet for later use by the doctor's or PAs.

Recently, we were told this is no longer "allowed" because it is not in the scope of practice for a nurse to mix two medications, label it, and put it away for someone else to be used. We are now being told to pull the Lidocaine and Bicarb (if wanted) from the Pyxis, and hand it to the doctor or PA who will be using it. This has caused alot of confusion because most Dr's dont even know how to draw it up!!!

What are your thoughts on this? Our facility only stocks the 20ml vials of lidocaine and the 30ml vials of bicarb, which would usually be used to draw up about 6-3cc syringes. Now, even if you only use it to make 1-3cc syringe, it must be thrown away. What a waste!!! Our Pyxis only holds 10 bottles of Lidocaine and 4 bottles of bicarb at a time, so we are constantly having to order this stuff from pharmacy because we go through 4 bottles of bicarb in about an hours time (only using 6cc's total out of 120ccs!)

Specializes in Cardiac, ER.

We are allowed to mix the lido with the bicarb, but only when ready to be used. We are also wasting a huge amount of meds,...there really is no such thing as a multi dose vial in the ER. Every time we run out of 4ml (1mg/ml) Morphine pre filled syringes we may draw up 2mg from the 10mg bottle, waste the other 8mg, then an hour later pull up 4mg from a new 10mg bottle, waste the other 6mg, then two hours later pull up 4mg and wast the 6mg again,...this is such a waste. It would be nice if we could somehow lock that bottle up for only that pt, and then wast it on dc.

Specializes in Emergency.

Have never buffered lido. Have only seen it done on a rare occasion. Also if the doctors and PA's dont know how to do it then maybe they not ought to be doing it. Also maybe you need to get your pharmacy involved.

it sounds like the hosptial might need to do a training course on how to draw up meds for the doctors so they know the right way if it is aganist hosptial protocall for a RN to do it. getting pharmacy invloed is a good idea too.

I personally would NEVER give anything that I haven't drawn up myself. I would never give anything to a pt that I haven't checked over myself. Med errors get made that way.

Specializes in IMCU.
I personally would NEVER give anything that I haven't drawn up myself. I would never give anything to a pt that I haven't checked over myself. Med errors get made that way.

Really good point.

Specializes in Operating Room.

My issue isn't with the nurses mixing and drawing up the meds(we do this in the OR) but with the putting the syringes aside for later use by someone else..how do you know they mixed it correctly, or that it's even the right meds to begin with?

Some docs do like to buffer the Lidocaine..I used to work with a group of general surgeons who did this.

Let me clarify this a bit. If I actually see the person draw up the medication from the vial that I can see what the med is (as for example in an emergency situation), and that person hands me the syringe, then I will give it. If I can't see what has been drawn up, I don't give it. Period. I had an RN friend once who didn't abide by this rule, and she ended up giving Vistaril IV. Fortunately, the pt didn't suffer any long term effects from it but my friend learned a valuable lesson that day. NEVER, EVER, give something that you haven't drawn up yourself.

I personally would NEVER give anything that I haven't drawn up myself. I would never give anything to a pt that I haven't checked over myself. Med errors get made that way.

Thats a very good point . Thank you for puting that I never thought of that im a new rn student and I will be starting in the Fall of this year.

Specializes in Emergency.
I personally would NEVER give anything that I haven't drawn up myself. I would never give anything to a pt that I haven't checked over myself. Med errors get made that way.

This is actually the reason that our current practice was stopped.

The lido is buffered with bicarb, then labeled with whats in it, the date, time, and initals. Then the syringes were stored away in the drawer. Its the PAs who use the lido at my facility, not the nurses, so ultimately is this OK in the big picture? I am not using the medication, and the PA trusts me or any nurse enough... But is it against the nurses scope to draw, mix, and label meds in syringes for later use? I think its something that only a pharmacist can do..

This is actually the reason that our current practice was stopped.

The lido is buffered with bicarb, then labeled with whats in it, the date, time, and initals. Then the syringes were stored away in the drawer. Its the PAs who use the lido at my facility, not the nurses, so ultimately is this OK in the big picture? I am not using the medication, and the PA trusts me or any nurse enough... But is it against the nurses scope to draw, mix, and label meds in syringes for later use? I think its something that only a pharmacist can do..

Well, if I were a PA I sure wouldn't be using it labeled or not. You can't verify 100% what is in that syringe, even if it is labeled. We have a couple of nurses who will tell me they left a labeled syringe in the med drawer with such and such med in it because they thought it was wasteful. The first thing I do is pitch them.

Are they not teaching this yet in nursing school? Not only should this rule apply to IV/IM medications in syringes, it should also pertain to po meds that have been removed from their unit doses package and placed in a med cup. I was taught to never give ANY medication that I haven't prepared myself.

As for being out of the scope of nursing practice I suppose that would depend on your particular's state's nurse practice act. It would seem to me that if nurses were doing that it could be considered somehow of mixing and dispensing without a license.

It basically boils down to it is not a safe practice, period.

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