Confidentiality in Error Reporting

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Apologies if this is posted elsewhere.

A patient's family member reported a witnessed medication error to me. I related their report to my manager via email including the family member's request that the manager look into the incident. The manager disclosed my name as the person making the report to the nurse who made the error. The nurse sent me an email telling me I should have copied them on the email sent to the manager. Now the work environment is uncomfortable. Did my manager have an obligation to keep my name confidential?

I try to stay out of these things to the largest extent possible, for this very reason (and others). The main way this can usually be accomplished is to contact whoever can deal with it in real time and say the patient would like to speak to someone about a patient care issue.

If that truly isn't feasible then my email would state, "The family of patient xxxx has requested to speak with someone regarding a concern about a medication administration on xx/xx/18 @ approximately _____ (time)." This could be sent to your manager +/- the nurse involved.

After the fact, who knows why your manager informed the nurse of the identity of the reporter; that doesn't seem necessary. I don't think there is a particular obligation that it be kept secret, though it might be common sense. Either way, let that go. You did have an obligation to pass on the patient's concern and you did that. The rest of it is between the nurse and manager. Just me, but I would probably reply to my coworker in person, "I'm sorry I didn't copy you, I didn't think of it at the time." If that doesn't smooth things over, that's his/her problem.

Specializes in Emergency, Telemetry, Transplant.
Did my manager have an obligation to keep my name confidential?

I can't see why your NM would name you to your colleague, but I don't think she really has an obligation to keep your name out of it. As JKL said, offer a short I'm sorry--in my mind, this is not an admission of any sort of guilt--and move on.

Specializes in Psych, Corrections, Med-Surg, Ambulatory.

This was clearly a management issue. You reported the situation to your manager. What she chooses to do with it is up to her. What difference can it possibly make to your coworker whether she hears it from you or the manager? Sounds like someone looking for a pretext to get her nose out of joint. It's called "deflection".

If you named her specifically to your nm, then yes, I could see why she'd want to be included as a courtesy. I like to know what I've done wrong too, preferably from the source. If it was just reporting the error itself and not naming names, then probably not.

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