Please, please, please remember the 5 rights!

Nurses Safety

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We recently had a HUGE med error in our facility which I think can serve as a good reminder to all of us to NEVER get complacent, NEVER trust anyone else to handle our medications and ALWAYS check the 5 rights before we give a medication.

We are fortunate in my pediatric hospital to have a satellite pharmacy for our medications. So if we need a stat med, pharmacy can make it right on the floor. We don't have to wait for it to be sent up from the regular pharmacy. This pharmacy covers PICU, NICU and Peds.

Recently a nurse from the Peds floor came to pick up a STAT dose of IV anti-epileptic medication for a patient having frequent seizures. The pharmacist handed her the medication, she went back to the floor, and gave the medication.

Immediately after she began giving the medication, the patient began gasping for breath and then stopped breathing. A code was called and our PICU team rushed over. The child was intubated and brought to our unit. It was suspected that he was seizing. He never lost a pulse, but was not breathing. We started out standard work up for a patient who had coded- ABG, glucose, blood culture, CBC, hook up to ventilator, call for x-ray and call for CT. EEG was set up which showed the patient was not seizing- but he was still not waking up.

After maybe 20 minutes someone from the peds floor came over hand handed the medication syringe to our attending physician. She simply said, "This is what he got." It was a syringe filled with Vecuronium. (For those who aren't familiar with Vec, it's a paralytic used for patients who are intubated. It paralyses all muscles- including the muscles used for respirations. But it has no sedative effects and leaves you totally awake and aware underneath.) This child had gotten the full dose (clearly labeled with the name of one of our PICU patients) that was meant to run over a 24 hour period, in about 15 minutes. He wasn't seizing- he was fighting to breathe. He wasn't waking up because he couldn't wake up. But he still felt all that was happening to him during the code.

If the 5 rights had been followed in this situation, everything would have been prevented. It was the wrong patient, the wrong medication, the wrong dose, the wrong time, the wrong reason. We, as nurses, were completely floored by the occurrence, and I think we all ran to our patient's rooms to double check everything that we had hanging.

So please, everyone. Even if it's an emergency med. Even if you're really busy. Even if the pharmacist handed you the syringe and said "this is what you need. Always check your medications before you give them.

Very fortunately, the patient suffered no long-term consequences as a result of this experience. He was extubated once the medication wore off. His CT showed no damage. The next day he was up and running around the ICU like nothing had ever happened. He is a very lucky boy.

Specializes in Critical Care, ED, Cath lab, CTPAC,Trauma.
The nurse had gotten the med from pharmacy- she did not check it before she hang it. We have to give meds prepared by pharmacy all the time. Why would you not give one? I'm confused.

If the syringe was labeled properly with the proper med and patient and it didn't match the patient you were going to give it to....you don't give it. just because pharmacy gave it to you for this patient.....you still need to be sure it is the right one to be given.

Specializes in ICU.

If the syringe was labeled properly with the proper med and patient and it didn't match the patient you were going to give it to....you don't give it. just because pharmacy gave it to you for this patient.....you still need to be sure it is the right one to be given.

Yes, of course. I was under the impression that the PP was saying that she wouldn't give any med that she did not prepare, and pharmacy prepares- and labels- many meds for us. It's a given that we check the 5 rights no matter what (or at least I thought it was?) I guess I just misunderstood what she was saying.

And the pharmacist. Two people screwed up here. Just because the nurses is the last person in the chain, doesn't mean the nurse was the ONLY PERSON that could have stopped this. A pharmacist that will hand over a paralytic to just anyone isn't anymore without guilt than the nurse that didn't check the syringe.

true, but i blame the nurse more than the pharmacist. she was the one administering the drug directly into the patient. i don't know how many times it was drilled into me during school, "you are the last line of defense for the patient!" i would imagine working with children that one would be even more cautious.

true, but i blame the nurse more than the pharmacist. she was the one administering the drug directly into the patient. i don't know how many times it was drilled into me during school, "you are the last line of defense for the patient!" i would imagine working with children that one would be even more cautious.

But either one of those two people could have prevented this. Nurses may be the last line of defense, but aren't the only line. And the fact that there's someone after you is no excuse to not do your job too.

Specializes in M/S, ICU, ICP.

Question, if the drug paralyzes all muscles and the heart is a big muscle why did the child still have a heart rate or a pulse???? At best I would think he/she would be bradycardic or some-thing. Just curious.

Specializes in PICU, Sedation/Radiology, PACU.
Question, if the drug paralyzes all muscles and the heart is a big muscle why did the child still have a heart rate or a pulse???? At best I would think he/she would be bradycardic or some-thing. Just curious.
Good question. Vecuronium is a neuro-muscular blockade. It works by blocking the uptake of acetylcholine by the nerves and cells and stopping the conduction of impulses from the brain to the muscles. Because the heart has its own intrinsic electrical conduction system, it's not effected by Vecuronium. This is fortunate, or we wouldn't be able to paralyze our intubation patients without killing them.

the question about vecuronium brings up the point of knowing 1) anatomy, 2) physiology and 3) the mechanism of action for medications or 3a) how to look this up when the occasion arises.

i am not being mean about this or picking on a particular poster (whose background is unknown to me); i am noting that a nurse must be able to do these prn. for all those who bewail the difficulty of anatomy and physiology and pathophysiology, this, this is why you must not only pass the coursework but acquire and maintain a good working knowledge of them to use until you retire.

perhaps a medication may be unfamiliar, as this one was. not knowing the difference between skeletal and cardiac muscle is a significant item. putting the two together in a pressure environment could lead to a very bad outcome.

Specializes in M/S, ICU, ICP.

Thank you Ashley. I never worked with babies or peds and I have been out of ICU and floor work for about 5 years now. I appreciate your answer and also appreciate that you didn't think I was stupid. :)

Specializes in M/S, ICU, ICP.

GrnTea, I realize that I could have looked up the medication and when I worked the floors and ICU I kept a drug handbook and the Merck manual on my cart. always. They were my Bible and the 10 commandments so to speak.

Later when PCs and the PalmOs came along I downloaded entire text books into my hand held. (....with frequent updates as it seems that daily there were drugs released or recalled LOL) I retired my Palm pilot and progressed to the smart phone and love the apps available to nurses.

Younger nurses have no idea how blessed they are in this day and age. ((Or how much easier it is to touch an App for information than it was to lug around huge drug books and try to keep them clean ..... and not stolen or borrowed. Now I wonder how many germs were on those books going room to room on our carts and shudder!!)

I can easily access the texts I need, the APIC site, and the CDC. These are the resources I need now in my job since I no longer work in direct patient care. As medicine advances we all need information at our fingertips to research whatever we need.(and that I may not have in my much older brain cells these days.) :)

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