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

I don't think she is, in an way, trying to say it isn't the nurses fault. Clearly she has stated that the fault is all gets. In my opinion, she shouldn't be held fully responsible, as she was a student. Everything she was doing should have been double checked by someone. I refuse to allow a student nurse without direct supervision take care of myself or any family member I'm responsible for. Furthermore, I'm glad I don't work with you, just from your comment you seem like you pretend to never make mistakes. Worst kind

She isn't downplaying anything. You seem to be one of those hard nosed nurses who think they're the absolute best. Nowhere in her post did she say med errors weren't serious, not did she say anything that would lead a person to think that way. She has clearly taken full blame for the error. You obviously have missed the whole point of this post. Even you have, more than likely made a med error. I can imagine that you would probably not admit that, thinking it makes you a bad nurse. Loosen up, it has to be awful being that uptight.

She isn't downplaying anything. You seem to be one of those hard nosed nurses who think they're the absolute best. Nowhere in her post did she say med errors weren't serious, not did she say anything that would lead a person to think that way. She has clearly taken full blame for the error. You obviously have missed the whole point of this post. Even you have, more than likely made a med error. I can imagine that you would probably not admit that, thinking it makes you a bad nurse. Loosen up, it has to be awful being that uptight.

To whom are you speaking?

Specializes in ED, Cardiac-step down, tele, med surg.

That's why I love scanning meds. The last facility I worked at didn't scan meds and I almost made a mistake of not giving the right dose; thankfully I did check. My current facility has bar code scanning and I think it reduces med errors significantly. I've almost hung the wrong fluids and failed to un clamp my secondary tubing a few times but nothing too severe, thank god! Mistakes are inevitable I think and it's very important to slow down and double check things.

Well, in your defense, it was your preceptor's fault.

In my state, students cannot give any medication unless the nurse is at the bedside, right beside of us, watching us give it and double checked it with us.

You did learn a valuable lesson. However, still your preceptor's fault.

I haven't worked in a hospital in over 7 years but isn't there a scanning system where if the incorrect med had been scanned, a warning would appear? The med would have been incorrect because it wouldn't have matched with the new dose. Sorry, but I've been a nurse, a student, a preceptor. It seemed your nurse was trying to CHA (cover her ass). Thankfully the patient was not harmed. I remember my first mistake. I gave a cardiac med without checking the patients bp. It was a little low. My preceptor's reply, "open up her saline drip a little more".

Basically you called all nurses liars in your tag line and in one of your first paragraphs you put nurses with addiction in the same class as nurses that make medication errors. So I guess you are in the same class since it appears you made a medication error? My fellow nurse, addiction is not considered a "class" It is a disease. A nurse that makes an error of any type is not considered to be in a "class". They are called human. That was a shocking comment. I don't know what the rest of the article said as I stopped reading at that point.

"I relegated nurses who made medication errors to that unfortunate class that includes nurses with substance abuse problems… a category I would never visit."

What I understood from this statement was that she never expected she'd make a med error JUST as she expects never to have a substance abuse problem. She's not lumping med errors WITH substance abuse.

And as far as calling nurses "liars". Well, unless a nurse is a new grad fresh on the unit, it's hard to believe a seasoned nurse not having had ANY med errors. It could be anything, incorrect dosage, drip rate, a minor error, a life threatening error. Anyone that says they've never had a med error means that not only do they have superhuman qualities and never make mistakes AND/OR the pharmacy, the doctor, all nurses before shift have not done anything to contribute to the likelihood of a med error. Yeah. Right.

Yes, exactly. Like most students I was naive and thought both medication errors and substance abuse problems were things that happened to OTHER nurses. I don't have a SA problem but I certainly understand how nurses are put at risk for serious problems and have much more compassion for those who do. My intent was to shock, or anyway startle people with my naivete.

Specializes in Peds/outpatient FP,derm,allergy/private duty.

It never crossed my mind that the 5 rights and the check 3 times were bogus. I didn't know most students believed that either, but I'm perhaps more OCD than other people and still enjoy holding a medicine cup at eye level to observe the meniscus.

I worked with one nurse in private duty (one patient) make an error. She grabbed a bottle of white pills that looked very much like another bottle of white pills without doing the mental checklist first.

I have no experience with how apparently punitive the med error issue has become, except to say that I observed a nurse give 10x correct dose of epinephrine to a 6 week old baby, really a nightmare, thankfully the child was OK. She was not fired, thank God because she turned out to be an outstanding nurse.

I'm not sure, if the same thing happened today, she would be a nurse at all.

Specializes in Med-surg, ltc, ltac, rehab.

I think every nurse has made some type of medication error at some point in their careers. Some have been major, others have not. I like the new scanning system a lot of facilities have in place now. It has helped me prevent medication errors numerous of times. It even has helped with the half dosages, because the system automatically alerts you once it's scanned. I feel much safer during medication administration because of the scanning.

I can honestly say that I've never made a med error... YET! I'm not so arrogant as to think I won't. I'm sure it's only a matter of time. I have noticed a trend the past few years though, of new grads having higher instances of near misses. At one point precepting the new girl last year, I noticed she grabbed the wrong patient's med out of the fridge, same drug, same dosage, different patient. I said, "Did you even read that before sticking it in your pocket?" She was a little confused as she pulled it back out. She saw the name and said, "Oh! Well, duh. Guess I need to get my eyes checked, huh?"

I thought "No you NEED be paying closer attention to what you're doing." And quite frankly her flippant attitude scared the bejeezus out of me. I watched her like a hawk the rest of her orientation.