Mistakes we have made

Nurses Safety

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I think it would be beneficial to us all to share stories of mistakes we have personally made, or almost made, or stories we have heard or seen of other nurses making mistakes. I don't know about all of you, but I know I learn best from mistakes. Something about that scare tactic drills the lesson in a little deeper than if someone was just to say "next time you should do it this way". I'm a brand new RN so fortunately I personally don't have any stories, but I have heard some good ones from experieneced RN's. I am off orientation in two weeks, so since I've been an RN I've always had someone double checking everything. I did have one close one though.

Our patient was taken to OR right before shift change. He was also a new admit from ER for Auto ped accident. In report we heard his lactate was high and his blood pressure was on the soft side. They had tried getting access but he was a hard stick, they even used the site rite ultra sound machine to try to get a peripheral and had no luck. He had one IV the paramedics had managed to get. His electrolytes were also thrown off. Phos was low, K was a little low, and he was going to need calcium. So we knew he was going to need some fluid resusitation and more than one IV for access. Anesthesia had said they would put a central line in our patient while he was in OR.

Patient is in OR and I started pondering the idea of what if he comes back really sick from OR. I asked my preceptor and the other nurses in our pod what they would do if he comes back unstable.Say they get the central line in but no chest x-ray had been done yet to verify. We know he is a hard stick, say our efforst are just as bad. Would they go ahead and use the central line before verification? Everyone agreed, if he was unstable enough YES they would use the central line.

Patient comes back from OR, Line is in, vital signs appear stable and he still has vecuronium on board so he isn't moving anything. I look at his central line to transduce a CVP from and there is a wierd dead ender on it, my preceptor recognized it to be the hub of the wire they had totally forgotten to pull out and she took it out. A fair amount of blood came out but we didn't think too much of it, we hooked up the CVP and a huge wave form appeard. It was definitely an arterial wave form. Chest x-ray by this time had been up and gotten verification of placement. It was in the CAROTID ARTERY! The doctors immediately came to bedside to pull it out and the patient fortunately didn't stroke from it and ended up being fine, but it was scary to think we had all talked about transfusing something through that line if need be. To think if we had given anything through there it would have gone straight to his brain.

Lesson for me learned is never trust any line placement until it at least has been transduced. But ALWAYS get chest x-ray first.

Your turn to share

hello guys.. i am a rn in a longterm facility with a bed capacity of 110 and im passing meds to almost 30 residents... im kinda worried because i made a dossage error last two weeks ago.. instead of giving 45mg of morphine i just gave 30mg. i didnt realize that 45mg of morphine will come from two bubble packs..from 30mg and 15mg = 45mg... i just want to ask you guys if im gonna be on trouble if they found out that mistake...? there was no any adverse reaction noted ... please advice.. thanks

Specializes in PICU, Gen ICU.
Yes, it's true, that SOME of us "eat our young".

In my career I have had supervisors, managers, and mentors that have treated me like their own personal protegee through 3-5 days of orientation, 1 semester of clinicals, or the first year on the job. My first supervisor at my first job has to have had the patience of the christ child himself. I called him if i couldn't read the doctors handwriting. I called him if i wasn't familiar with protocol. I called him when i stuck myself with my patients accucheck lancet because i laid it down on the bed next to me, I called him when my sliding scale only went to 350 and the residents sugar was well over 400. These are all things that a seasoned nurse would not have had to ask. But God bless my supervisor, he answered me every time(But i noticed that he made it a habit to stay on other floors or i would have never learned to think for myself). That was 15 years ago, I have since had similar experiences in multiple settings from multiple mentors.

I have also had some really heinous wenches who fed on my ignorance instead of curing it and laughed at my anxiety when they could have relieved it. Now I know that if they could treat a new nurse so cruelly, there were probably some reason why they had so much negativity to share and i feel sorry for them. As a nurse of almost 20 years, i've experienced alot of differing nursing attitudes. Most of my experiences have been positive. But you have to gravitate toward the positive influence. If there is no one to help you in your environment(no support or leadership) you are in the wrong place. It sounds like you have found a better "fit" for you. That's important.

In answer to your question, Yes, some of us DO eat our young. But I don't. And that doesn't happen in my environment because i'm a manager now, and i can influence what goes on. And there are alot of nurses out there who have hope for the future and recognize that the new nurses are that hope.

MissChiatia,

I would like to applaud you for sharing this with us. I still consider myself a "new" nurse (less than 4 years) but I am very mature in LIFE-experiences. I have been blessed with many who share my committment to compassionate patient care AND yet I have, and continue to be, haunted and taunted by those (younger and older with more and/or less experience and/or knowledge) who (I feel) feel threatened by my genuine spirit, strong work ethic and empathetic care for ALL of my patients.

I refuse to compromise my standards. I try to care for those coming in behind me. I treasure those who continue to support and mentor my efforts despite what others "think" of me. Everyone needs to remember that if we don't take care of each other - who will?

Blessings to all!

This is a really great convo to have. I'm 21 and a LPN. I'm so scared every night when I go to work. I'm not even out of my 90 day probation w a new company and I have made 2 narc med errors.(No harm to either patient) I have self reported myself twice now... And I made the mistake of assessing a fallen patient in the dark and trusting an aide to put out an emergency page out for the supervisor which was botched... just so frustrating! I am just so scared I'm going to loose my job or license more than ever now... I'm also 6 weeks pregnant. I'm actually scared to go back to work tonight :chair:

I came across this website by accident. I have no one to talk to & I'm feeling extremely depressed right now. :bluecry1:

I'm a new LPN & got my 1st nursing job in the local nursing home. Having 30+ people to pass pills to, thicken liquids, people refusing their meds, falls & other medical emergencies, the secretaries paging overhead for phone calls for me from the Dr & constant interruptions, things on my mind... all equaled a really bad mix. I had 4 med errors in 6 months. Things like giving Morphine 10mg IR instead of Morphine 10mg ER. No one suffered ill effects but I screwed up majorly... I was fired on Monday. The DON told me she was going to report me to the Board of Nursing for unsafe practice. Part of me was mad that she said that... part of me thinks she should. She told me that there will be an investagation... but I can get a job somewhere else "Perhaps in a clinic where all you have to do is smile & answer phones" was her reply. Maybe I'm not met to be a nurse... I'm doubting everything in my life now. Where do I go from here?

LTC facilities often have poor staffing, poor nursing support, and unrealistic expectations. It seems to me, that most animal shelters in America have better regulations, than some long term care facilities. Staffing always seems to be an issue. Ratio's are crazy and unregulated in many states. Most mistakes (as far as med errors go) happen due to interruptions during med pass. I am wondering out of the those 4 errors, how many times you were interrupted during those med passes?? I really think that as a new grad, you should have been offered further training and education by the facility you were working for. If interruptions were an issue, it would have been your responsibility to report that to management, and then management would have to deal with that issue. The DON does not sound like a very compassionate or very professional person. Her comments were in my opinion, out of line. Sounds like it has been Quite a While since she has worked the floor. You are a new grad, and there is another LPN position in your future!! Consider something other than LTC.

Specializes in Cardiac.

I received a TO order from the Dr nurse to "hang NS at 250" on a pt. So I hung NS at 250/hr. I went home that night and was off the next day. I got a call on my day off from my manager saying the Dr flipped out because he wanted "a one time 250 bolus of NS" ... I even did a read back on the phone and they ok'ed it ... Not really my fault but the Dr and Nurse sure tried to make me feel like it was...

I gave heparin IVP and not SQ ...

I turned off a hep drip because the pt was going to a 2d echo and the pump would not fit on the wheelchair poll.

All the pt are fine, but I felt like crap after each of these!

Specializes in geriatrics/long term care.

When I was a new nurse to the hospital setting, my patient came back from dialysis upstairs. I had orders to flush her central line with NS. Instead I flushed her dialysis access ports with NS. I thought there was something strange about that port at the time but didn't second guess myself til too late. Had to take her back upstairs to dialysis so the dialysis nurses could reflush the ports with the appropriate solution. No harm to the patient, but i was so scared when i realized i made an errorr.

I want to thank you for sharing these stories! I graduate in a few months and am reading them with interest!

I have not had a chance to make a mistake yet . . but I did have a close call. I logged into our computer system but the pt name did not come up. I did a search on the pt and date of birth since the name was a common one. Several patients came up, two of them came up with the exact same name and DOB down to the year! But their personal info (address, height/weight) was different so I know I had two different people. I then had to check the name band for the medical record #, and then verified it with his paper chart. Finally clicked on the right patient and it reflected his height/weight and health issues. Scary!

Specializes in pulm/cardiology pcu, surgical onc.
I changed out the morphine syringe in a PCA pump. Instead of the 1/1 ratio syringe, I put in a 5/1 ratio. The pt received five times the prescribed dose of Morphine. The only thing that saved her life, and my license was she had alzheimers. The staff would hit the PCA before doing pt care, turning, etc. The next nurse who found the error told me the pt was heavily sedated, but OK. After ten years, I still cringe when I think of this.

I'd never heard of this mistake really happening until a few days ago to a patient on my unit. The scary thing is he had a basal running also and it was co-signed three times with different RN's due to over sedation and decreased resps that no one could figure out why until the RRT came. Glad I missed out on that one but reminds me and my co-workers to really check what we sign.

When I was a med aide in long term peds I was orienting a new med aide and it was her last night. So I decided to help bust out the last med pass at 0600 by giving some meds for my orientee. Well at this facility all the meds were thru GT's so we could pre-pour our pass and put the syringes in the correct childs spot in the tray we used on the med cart. The new med aide switched the cards around and I had worked there long enough to have memorized where each childs meds were to be, not realizing that she had changed the sequence. When she asked me if I had given little Billy's meds I said yes, just did them. Um, no you didn't, there still here. My heart dropped into my shoes :( yikes who got what meds? What a total screw up, but a lesson to never give what you don't draw up yourself.

P.S." Little Billy " had quite the fun morning after his unexpected dose of tranxene (unfortunately mum wasn't too keen on the idea).

I currently work as a CNA in a pain management office, mainly doing vitals. Anyway, we use the patient's first name when we call them back from the waiting room, and usually ask them to state their last name when we have seperated ourselves from the waiting area. Anyway, one particularly hectic day, I was getting ready to call for "Larry," didn't ask his last name though. When I took his B/P, it was 160/100, and according to the previous visit, it was 124/82 (If I remember right...). So, I thought maybe I'd had a false read. I figured I'd do a little more of the vitals and recheck the B/P. When I asked his age, he stated he was 15 years older then recorded. Checked the social security number: wrong patient!

True, no harm done to the patient, but it's an important reminder to me now that I'm in nursing school: ALWAYS IDENTIFY THE PATIENT!

I currently work as a CNA in a pain management office, mainly doing vitals. Anyway, we use the patient's first name when we call them back from the waiting room, and usually ask them to state their last name when we have seperated ourselves from the waiting area. Anyway, one particularly hectic day, I was getting ready to call for "Larry," didn't ask his last name though. When I took his B/P, it was 160/100, and according to the previous visit, it was 124/82 (If I remember right...). So, I thought maybe I'd had a false read. I figured I'd do a little more of the vitals and recheck the B/P. When I asked his age, he stated he was 15 years older then recorded. Checked the social security number: wrong patient!

True, no harm done to the patient, but it's an important reminder to me now that I'm in nursing school: ALWAYS IDENTIFY THE PATIENT!

I once put the wrong ID band on a patient. I was rushed, and when I asked the patient "are you Mrs. ___" she replied yes (I didn't know then that she was SUPER confused!). She was even up on the board as Mrs ___. THANK GOODNESS, her son came in before the RN gave any medication or anything. He tore us a new one, which was deserved. Lesson learnt, I NEVER EVER put an ID band on until I can identify the patient 100%- either from them, or a family member, or the ER staff who have transported them to the floor. I also now check the vital signs chart etc, against the wristband. ALWAYS identify your patients! And that goes for if you are a CNA, RN or anything!

What I was embarassed with is I placed a wig on my patient b4 at a nursing home.

Hi I just encountered this thread. I'll read this later when I come back.

I feel so sad because I am currently in the training period of working in a small provincial hospital. As a trainee, I am under my superior. So what happened was, there was a laboratory request for a patient that had the same surname and it got mixed up. Long story short, I made an incident report then got a memo from the chief nurse. I feel so stupid and unworthy to be a nurse but at the same time I feel that this is a challenge that I need to triumph over. Please I need your advice.:( My train of thought now is that maybe I shouldn't be a nurse because I was negligent and incompetent.:(

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