Anyone Who Says They Don't is Lying: Medication Error

I made my first medication error as a student. I thought it would be my last, but real-world nursing was a wakeup call. Nurses Medications Article

Like most students, I thought the 5 Rights of Medication Administration were a little... bogus. I wasn't a kid; surely I could be depended on to have common sense. Weren't the 5 Rights almost insulting to nurses? I had been giving medicine to myself, family members, children at the summer camp where I worked, residents at the assisted living facility where I was an aide before nursing school, for years. I never gave Tylenol where I should have given Benadryl or accidentally gave a medicine one hour later instead of four hours later. Certainly I never gave medication to the wrong camper or resident. I relegated nurses who made medication errors to that unfortunate class that includes nurses with substance abuse problems... a category I would never visit.

I made my first medication error (that I know of) in my second semester of clinical, on an oncology unit. My single patient, an elderly man with acute myelogenous leukemia, was ordered for IV Zosyn. I had checked this carefully, made a care plan, wrote down in detail when I was to give the medications. Halfway through the morning, the doctor came through and increased the dosage. I think I was dimly aware of this, had read the order. At the time for the medication, I went to the refrigerator, checked the right patient and right drug. I knew it was the right time and the right route. I told the nurse I was giving the medication now, and she nodded and gestured me away. My clinical instructor was on call if I needed him. I hung the medication for the sweet old man without incident.

An hour later, the patient's nurse came to me, holding a bag of zosyn. "Why didn't you give this?" she asked. "I did!" I responded, alarmed and defensive. "Then why is it here?"

We went to the bedside and found the zosyn I had hung. Right patient, right drug, right time, right route... wrong dose. The pharmacy tech had brought the new bag without removing the old one, which had already been prepared. When I picked up the bag from the refrigerator, I didn't notice there were two for that patient, and I never rechecked the dose. I felt cold and hot and nauseated. How could I have done such a thing?

The nurse berated me for not checking properly and began to fill out an error reporting form. I heard her telling the other nurses about it. "Oh, just a student not paying attention," she said with an air of weary superiority.

When she finished making the report, she came to me. "You know your clinical instructor needs to know about this," she said. "I can tell him about it if you want." I sensed an eagerness in her voice. "I'll tell him about it myself," I said, insulted.

I was surprised at how calm my instructor was. I didn't know him well, but from the nurse's reaction, I expected a blowout; possibly a suspension. "Okay," he said. "Do you know why that happened?" I explained that I hadn't checked the dosage. "I don't think you'll make that mistake again," he said. "There's a form you have to fill out for the school, and I think you aren't allowed to make more than two errors, but you're going to be okay." In his record of the incident, the instructor included the line: "To the student's credit, she took ownership of the incident and reported it to me personally."

In my previous jobs, I occasionally had to deliver discipline to employees, and I felt like I hadn't been disciplined enough. I looked at the situation as if I were one of my junior camp counselors, and went to the theory professor with a plan: I wanted to explain to the first semester students what I had done so they would know it can happen. They listened to my experience with interest, although I knew they were all thinking "but I would never do that". Maybe I prevented a few errors. I know I provided an example.

Naturally, I thought this would be the last medication error I would ever make, and to my knowledge, I didn't make any more during nursing school. My first job was at a busy hospital with a high nurse/patient ratio; I usually had 7-10 patients during the day. It was months before I felt like I had time for anything more than running around dispensing medication. One of my friends from orientation made the first medication error in our group. She confessed it to the charge nurse, a woman I had already grown to admire enormously as someone who always knew the right thing to do. "Well, call it in to the reporting line," she said straightforwardly. "We all make medication errors. Any nurse who says she doesn't is lying."

My friend felt better, and I was startled. I had never heard this put so bluntly before. My instructors said it was easy to do, but they never quite got across to me that everyone does it. I filed this line away in my mind.

I've made several medication errors since then. I mixed up a John and a Tom and the IV bags were found by the next nurse-the worst error that I'm aware of committing. (No harm to patients.) I've hung the right antibiotic at the wrong time. I've given whole pills where I should have given half. I've given medications that were discontinued a few minutes previously.

Recently I gave a class on medication errors to a group of students, with examples. "These are all taken from my practice or were done by nurses I know," I said casually. The students were shocked. "YOU did that?" one of them asked. "No, my friend did," I said. Through my years as a nurse, with experience on various committees that look into incident reports, and many late-night confessionals among night nurses, I haven't become immune to med errors--but I have come to understand them as part of nursing life. I'm quite sure I don't make more errors than the average nurse; I hope I make less. I don't usually make the same error twice (the exception being those half-pills-I was relieved when I moved to a hospital where all pills are split in the pharmacy). And I've counseled many students and new graduates through their first medication errors.

And because I've learned that every medication error is a systems error: I report, report, report, and encourage others to do the same.

Learn more from another nurse: "Making Mistakes As A Nurse" video...

anyone-who-says-she-doesnt-is-lying.pdf

This was an interesting group of comments. What I found most interesting about your story is the nurse whose responsibility was to the patients. It was HER who should have taken ownership as well as you. She should have acted like the mentor she was suppose to be and double checked the medication before you gave it. The error would have been caught right then. Instead, she just blamed you without acknowledging her own responsibility in this. Whenever I have had nursing students working with me taking care of my group of patients, I always double checked any crucial things, such as medications. Students are students to learn, not to be left on their own. What if you had given twice the dose, instead of less? What if it had been Heparin and you gave 10000 units instead of 1000?

Even now as a manager, when I have a nurse who is a relatively new graduate, I check on things that are crucial to the patient or I assign someone to do so. You have a right to a learning curve.

We were never allowed to give a single med without the assigned RN or our instructor.

I recently encountered a new nurse who didnt administer A very important IV med properly. I had the patient who was due to get it. When going in the med cabinet i grabbed all the bottles. When looking over them there were 3 that were dated from the day before. A new nurse was standing next to me and I spoke out loud that it was wierd that there were "extra bottles" from the day before. The new nurse admitted to having the patient the day before and thought that only one bottle needed to be given. ( there were 3 leftover and the patient was supposed to get ALL of them) I told her that all of the bottles were to be completed. Her face dropped. I questioned her asking why she wouldnt question the left over bottles. She couldnt really give me an answer. Its scary to me that a new nurse would not question this! Ive encountered a few situtaions like this. If you are a new nurse never be afraid to question something! It could mean your license or a bad patient outcome.

Specializes in Family Practice, Med-Surg.

I was working my 5th night in a row. I realized my mistake before I walked out of the med room. However, it was a serious enough potential error, I called in sick the next night. I was just too tired and I did not usually work 6 nights in a row.

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
Personally I hate that some schools are now teaching "the six rights"--the sixth right being Right Documentation. Five is enough, five is for patient safety in administration. Yes, we have to document, but that isn't specific to medication safety. Five is easy to remember and has a good mnemonic in the five fingers. " Right Documentation " has just been a distraction to my students.

According to my BRN, there are now 10 rights, and what goes in the 9th and 10th are even logically easy to remember.

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
I was working my 5th night in a row. I realized my mistake before I walked out of the med room. However, it was a serious enough potential error, I called in sick the next night. I was just too tired and I did not usually work 6 nights in a row.

This is where the "human error" comes in. Especially when distracted. Our systems are in place to try to prevent errors for good reasons. However, we cannot take away the human aspect of who we are.

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
This, and there isn't really a hard stop for "right route". The eMAR can't substitute for a nurse's critical thinking, and to become reliant on the eMAR to do it all is opening oneself up to a med
Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
This, and there isn't really a hard stop for "right route". The eMAR can't substitute for a nurse's critical thinking, and to become reliant on the eMAR to do it all is opening oneself up to a med error/sentinel event.

Yes, yes, and YES! I once made an error because the med I was giving did not have a guardrail in place as a continuous drip as ALL other meds we gave as continuous drips did. This was my human error as I was assuming it would be there. In spite of knowing Never assume, it just didn't occur to me in that moment. Of course, as with many errors, I was rushed, extremely behind with a very critical patient and no one to help much that night. Typical short staffing, once again. Not using this as an excuse. I am responsible for my own actions. I learned more as a result of this error than I have in ANY other situation I can even think of. The main point is that we never should solely rely on technology to help or be accurate. It never takes the place of using your own brain in every single instance.

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
This is where the "human error" comes in. Especially when distracted. Our systems are in place to try to prevent errors for good reasons. However, we cannot take away the human aspect of who we are.

I accidently erased part of this quote when I went to make a comment. Sorry! I didn't know how to cancel it.

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
The entire point of my article is that the 5 Rights are not "bogus". My experience with students has showed me that most students (like myself as a first-year nursing student) don't think they're really necessary.

Reporting of medication errors has led to such systems improvements as ID bands, allergy bands, individual dosing, specification of route, precalculated IV medications, and more efficient MARs.

I am the villain of this piece; I have announced my own mistake to a large audience in order to shine a light on medication errors. It's odd that you would read this as me attempting to absolve the nurse of responsibility.

In fact, I only mentioned the "systems error" concept briefly in the last paragraph, mostly because I knew how many nurses would read this and think "but that was a systems problem"; I wanted to acknowledge that aspect. The bulk of the piece is about the importance of the 5 Rights and individual responsibility. Please don't imply that it is about the 5 Rights being bogus and irresponsibility being acceptable.

I understood your intent. It was clear to me, and I couldn't agree more with your perspective. Also, when I was in school for my RN degree, I had been an LVN for nearly 13 years. Like you, I also thought I knew how to give meds and didn't always follow the 5 rights consistently (I always do now, but actually follow 7 rights) I had never made an error (that I am aware of) at that point. When I did make my first error, I changed that practice to include 6) Indication, 7) Education. Also, now checking for expiration, that the doctor actually wrote a correct dose, redundancy, interactions, and whatever else seems appropriate in the situation. This took many years of experience and unfortunately, errors I made and those of others I learned from. I still say that systems are VERY important. Short-staffing and interruptions abound which, at least in my case, were the culprit for my humanness and errors.

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
We're actually now up to as many as 14 rights of medication administration.

14 Rights of Drug Administration Flashcards - Cram.com

In other words, we are to know everything possible in relation to giving medications...nearly as much as the prescribers now. The fact that pharmacies also double check the physician orders, we nurses are to know correct doses, indications, dilutions, etc...So, general knowledge and experience is key. It is a huge responsibility and no matter where down the line a contributing factor may come in regarding an error, it still ends up that the nurse will have some culpability. Not always fair, but the reality.

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
When I did my psych rotation, there was a med tech that gave all meds. Although, there was a team that engaged when an emergent situation arose that would give injections...ex., a person was getting worked up and need meds to calm down. I guess it's different where you work and live. Also, it is possible to make a mistake and not realize it. Plus in psych meds are prepored making mistakes less likely. At least from my experience. Correct me if I'm wrong. But, when you're in a hurry, and have a million things to do, sometimes mistakes are made. That's why this post is great. It helps those who haven't made mistakes learn from others, and those who have, it gives them a place to talk about it. I don't think it helps to pretend like it doesn't happen, because when it does, it makes those who have made a mistake feel so much worse, guilty, like a horrible nurse...I could go on.

Thank-you!