Nurse Gives Lethal Dose of Vecuronium Instead of Versed

On December 26, 2017, a tragic and preventable death occurred when a patient at Vanderbilt Hospital was sent for a Positron Emission Tomography (PET) scan and received a lethal dose of Vecuronium instead of Versed. Nurses General Nursing Article

PET scans are typically performed in the outpatient setting and not inpatient. They are not emergent. This was a full body inpatient PET scan which might be said is inappropriate resource utilization.

If it had been done in the outpatient setting, it's unlikely that Versed would have been administered. Essentially a patient died because a dangerous medication that was never ordered was given.

The patient, a 75 yr old female, was admitted to neuro ICU on 12/24/2017 with intraparenchymal hematoma of the brain, headache, homonymous hemianopia (loss of visual field bilaterally), atrial fib, and hypertension. She was alert and oriented and doing well, about to be transferred to SDU. While the patient was waiting for her scan, she asked for medication to prevent claustrophobia. The provider ordered 2 mg of Versed, and the pt's nurse was asked to come down and administer it.

At the time, the pt's nurse was covering a lunch break for another nurse and asked the "help all nurse" to go down and give the Versed so the procedure would not be delayed or rescheduled. The "help all nurse" performs different tasks, but there was no job description for a "help all nurse". It is not clear if the "help all nurse" was an ICU nurse, or a nurse floated from elsewhere, such as Med Surg. Clearly, the "help all nurse" was not trained in conscious sedation, and was seemingly unfamiliar with both Versed and Vecuronium.

The "help all nurse" searched for Versed under the pt's profile in the Pyxis but it did not come up. So she chose override and typed in "VE". The first drug to come up was Vecuronium, which she selected. She then proceeded to reconstitute the drug, not recognizing that Versed does not need to be reconstituted, and not taking heed of the red cap on the vial or the words "paralytic agent". Next, she administered 2 mg of the Vecuronium IVP and left the patient.

Vecuronium and Versed

Vecuronium is a neuromuscular blocking agent that causes paralysis and death if patients are not monitored.

Basically, the patient will be paralyzed, conscious and unable to draw a breath. All sensation will be experienced- panic, pain, fear, but the patient is unable to cry out. It's truly the stuff of nightmares.

Versed is often given for procedural sedation but is not a paralytic. Versed can affect respirations, and patients must be closely monitored for hypoventilation.

Timeline

Here is a timeline of events, where the time was documented.

  • The doctor ordered Versed 2 mg IV at 1447 on 12/26/2017.
  • The Pharmacy reviewed the order at 1449.
  • Vecuronium 10 mg was withdrawn from the Pyxis at 1459 using override.
  • Vecuronium administered but not documented. Patient left alone, unmonitored.
  • Rapid response was called at 1529.
  • Return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) was restored after 2 rounds of ACLS
  • Patient was intubated and returned to neuro ICU
  • Patient displayed myoclonic jerks with posturing in ICU
  • Anoxic brain injury is documented
  • Extubation was performed at 1257 on 12/27/2017
  • Death was pronounced at 1307 due to pulselessness

The Findings

The Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS) did not investigate the event until October, 2018 as the death was not reported to them at the time.

According to CMS standards, patients have a right to receive care in a safe setting and hospitals have a responsibility to mitigate potentially fatal mistakes.

CMS ruled that Vanderbilt failed to provide safe care and protect patients. Vanderbilt was placed in serious and immediate jeopardy by CMS.

Since that ruling, the CMS has accepted Vanderbilt's plan of action.

What Went Wrong

  • No documentation of the Vecuronium being administered
  • Patient was not monitored
  • Autopsy was not conducted as should have been for an unusual death such as one caused by a medication error
  • Death certificate said the cause of death was a cerebral bleed, not a medication error.

Contributing Factors

  • Pyxis override functionality - a necessary function, but contributed to the error
  • Failure of the hospital to ensure that only nurses trained in conscious sedation can administer Versed
  • Failure of hospital policy to address the manner and frequency of monitoring
  • Concern about convenience over safety- pressure to not reschedule a test rather than taking the time to safely prepare the patient
  • Staffing- Covering another nurse's patients results in an unsafe workload

Blaming

The simplest thing is to blame the nurse for 100% of the error. Her failure to follow basic medication safety steps is not defensible.

But stopping there prevents us from learning how it happened and preventing future mistakes. We need to learn more about the science of mistakes. We all make them. Something in our brains allows us to see what we expect to see and not always what is there, as in running a red light. Or not registering red caps and cautionary labels on a high-alert medication.

The "help all nurse" was distracted in that she had an orientee with her, and immediately after giving the medication, went to the ED to perform a swallow screen test. She was performing a series of tasks.

The patient's nurse did not delegate appropriately as she did not confirm the "help all nurses " knowledge and skills. Tasks should be delegated to the right person, and this was not the right nurse to administer Versed. Maybe nurses are not all interchangeable as administrations sometimes like to think.

Vanderbilt did not clearly define role expectations, or patient monitoring in conscious sedation.

What do you think were the causes, and would have prevented this from occurring?

Related post When Nurses Make Fatal Mistakes

Specializes in ED, ICU, Prehospital.
My epic allows the option "provider administered." It is very useful in emergencies when another nurse actually gives the med. It is also useful when a np/pa or md gives a med. because they do not have pyxis access.

Intentionally misusing this feature would be one case where I would seriously consider a nurse deserving license revocation.

Agreed. EPIC has in some facilities, enabled the option to "cut and paste" from column to the next. In other words, I never laid eyes on said 6 patients, yet my charting says that for 12 hours, I regularly rounded, wristbands were on, bed locked and low, call bell in reach, etc.

KPH tells a story in their orientation about an ICU RN of theirs who did just this, but with VS. As RN was checking out her holiday facebook pix and posts...her pt was circling the drain. She had also adjusted the alarm settings to far outside the parameters of someone being an ICU level pt. I don't know the outcome, as KPH kept the whole thing hush hush. RN was terminated, but got her job back because of a grievance procedure thru the union. They argued that if EPIC hadn't enabled the feature, and KPH hadn't allowed the feature, she wouldn't have used it.

The RN was reinstated, and relegated to a "less challenging" job description. No charges were brought to the state level, bc....oh.....well.....hmmm.....the same reason Vanderbilt didn't self report and report this RN to the TBON?

There is no standardization with the technology--but even so---this all comes down to the integrity of the RN and of the facility that employs the RN. Vanderbilt's orientation, training, screening, policies and procedures needs a serious look---by an outside and unbiased observer.

The RN needs to....be investigated by the TBON and be grateful if they don't revoke her license and/or she gets a civil suit slapped on her by the family of this patient.

This really goes to the professionalism, integrity, training and work culture of Vanderbilt. This RN seemed to believe that this behavior was acceptable, and maybe it is at Vanderbilt---which is why a thorough investigation by an unbiased third party needs to happen.

Specializes in Public Health.

My main question is was Versed even necessary in the first place. IV Benadryl, Ativan or valium would've done the job right? Im not a bedside nurse anymore but seriously does a 75 yr old woman require Versed to get any scan?

Specializes in ED, ICU, Prehospital.
My main question is was Versed even necessary in the first place. IV Benadryl, Ativan or valium would've done the job right? Im not a bedside nurse anymore but seriously does a 75 yr old woman require Versed to get any scan?

Although the issue was not the particular drug that was ordered (versed), it was the RN's appalling lack of standard safety practices...

Even had she given IV benadryl, Ativan or Valium--you never, ever leave a patient without assessing their response, when giving these types of IV medications. The patient was elderly, with change of mentation and a brain bleed. You don't give iv sedatives, antihistamines (which have a sedating effect), or anti-anxiolytics and just walk away. Period.

It doesn't matter what was ordered. It mattered that this RN didn't pull the correct drug in the first place, overriding all safety protocols in place to prevent her from doing exactly what she did. On top of it, she clearly didn't know anything about this patient...and believing she had a syringe with Versed in it....she.walked.away.without.assessing.this.patient. Elderly patients can have very different responses to IV sedation, which is what the RN believed she was administering.

She failed on every count. I agree that this pt should never have even been ordered IV sedation for a PET scan in the first place...

which again leads right back to the appalling lack of judgement in this RN. She should have advocated for this patient. Maybe no medication was necessary. Just as another poster suggested....slow the hell down and sit for a minute with this poor woman. Maybe all she needed was an explanation of what was happening.

Specializes in Nursing Education, Public Health, Medical Policy.
So, a nurse:

diverts a narcotic, but only once...

logs into the chart of a patient on another floor, but only does it one time...

comes to work drunk, but only once...

Or kills a patient, but only once...

The contradiction of the statement ... Vande is run by expert knowledgable people, to I have personally investigated SEVERAL SENTINAL EVENTS is amazing to me. I need a very big googly eyed emoji for this Davey!

Cheers

You have no idea what you are talking about. No one is perfect and this is a VERY large medical center. Mistakes and tragic ones happen when so many humans are involved. Not defending what happened...at all. You must not be aware of the sentinel events which undoubtedly occur where you are employed.

If you are going to quote me please use the quote feature. It is and sentinel.

quote I will say this about . My experiences with Vandy are several years old - however, their clinical processes and systems approaches to care were squared away. One must keep in mind that humans can defeat a process or system.

IMHO it was human error/systems error. I'm going with a 90/10 ratio on the nurse. And it's a tough call.

Only because even if she DID NOT KNOW what the DRUG was for presuming she's not dumb butt stupid

- PARALYZING AGENT - could she not read English language words with meanings -- it

mix it STERILE WATER (she had to freaking draw this in a syringe!) This took time, effort. Another good place to stop. end quote

Very true...human error and obvious system failure were to blame here.

Specializes in School Nurse.

Yeah, but in addition to all the nurse did wrong, the hospital covered up the error by mischaracterizing the death to escape the post-mortem evaluations of what went wrong.

Whether the study should have been done inpatient or outpatient is a moot point. That is not a nursing call. Whether the pyxis machine should have been able to be overridden is also a moot point. Basic nursing 101 and the 5 rights of medication administration is what applies. It is a grevious error resulting in the death of a patient. I can see no fault with the physician, or the pharmacist. Maybe the nurse was overwhelmed and tasked to an unsafe level, but she still chose to accept that assignment and failed to provide due care and meet the standard of nursing care by not following the 5 rights rule.

We order PET's daily. NEVER do we order Versed for "claustrophobia". MAYBE Ativan. Talk about over-medicating!!

I also needed to comment on the "red cap" part of the article. Our B12 comes with a red vial cap, clearly red is not the universal warning sign of a dangerous medication

We order PET's daily. NEVER do we order Versed for "claustrophobia". MAYBE Ativan. Talk about over-medicating!!

I also needed to comment on the "red cap" part of the article. Our B12 comes with a red vial cap, clearly red is not the universal warning sign of a dangerous medication

It's already been discussed why this was ordered. Versed has a shorter half-life which is desirable with neuro patients.

Point taken on the red cap thing but still you would have thought the "paralytic agent" printed in big white letters on said red cap would have made a thinking person pause for a moment.

if anyone is shocked that such an error could happen, read this compilation of errors involving paralyzing agents:

Paralyzed by Mistakes - Reassess the Safety of Neuromuscular Blockers in Your Facility | Institute For Safe Medication Practices

I don't think any one of the errors in the article rise to the level of negligence involved in this case however, although some of them are pretty mind-boggling.

Specializes in PICU, Pediatrics, Trauma.
The kind of anxiety produced by the claustrophobia of a scanner tube is not something that can be shushed away by some hand-holding and kind words. I went for a cardiac MRI this summer and discovered that I have some lingering PTSD from my experience with congestive heart failure last year, during which I had to lie flat for studies while drowning in my own lungs. I had no idea I would react as I did! I even had an MRI of my injured hip when I came home from deployment in 2014, so I was really surprised by my utter panic. I had to halt the scan - super embarrassing, but there was no way I could talk myself through enduring an hour of what is an interactive scan in that MRI tube (open MRIs are not suitable for cardiac MRIs, unfortunately). I had to get a dose of PO Valium prescribed by my electrophysiologist and reschedule the scan. I knew it wasn't rational, but I could not have done it without 10mg of Valium. So yeah, I totally understand why this patient needed something (definitely not vec!!!) for her study. Poor woman.

I was thinking the same here. Talking doesn't help claustrophobia....but is a bit beside the point. Whatever the med prescribed and for whatever reason, the errors here were profound.

This whole story obviously brings up so many issues. Nurse practice acts, punitive culture, contributing factors, accountability, responsibility, basic nursing knowledge, etc....And I can hardly wrap my head around how someone in this "Resource" roll did not know that she was administering a paralytic????? NONE OF THIS MAKES SENSE.

I've made my share of mistakes after 30 something years in practice and have learned from each and every one of them. I've done work arounds and now NO LONGER DO. I've pulled and given wrong meds in haste doing overrides and NO LONGER DO. I've seen others' mistakes and changed my own habits as a result.

As I have sympathy for this nurse and am to the point of anger towards the pressures we face by administrators who care only for their bottom lines....I still can't get my mind around how a Reaource nurse in an ICU setting could have made THIS mistake?????

SHE IS ACCOUNTABLE to be sure. However, I still believe this hospital WRONGLY had her in this role. Vanderbilt has BIG accountability in this one point alone. She obviously did not have the knowledge, training, and/or skills to be in this role, let alone the appropriate integrity, and personal accountability, in that she agreed to work in this role in the first place.

(I stumbled on wording, but I think my points are clear)