I had a BAD day... very bad.

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Today was our last day in clinicals. I made my first med error! Before giving ferrous sulfate, lovenex and effexor I failed to take vitals. I was bordering on giving them late for several other reasons, and didn't feel that I needed to take these measurements before administering these particular drugs. I have been written up for it and given a bad mark in patient assessment, medication administration 5 rights, and prioritizing care. Needless to say, being the last day and first error I feel pretty badly! I was doing really well until today and believe me from now on, I am taking vitals first thing regardless! Oh well, I ALMOST made it through first semester. I have a conference tomorrow, and have been told that this will "probably" not fail me out but will be put in my permanent record regardless.

Here is what happened:

The meds were due at 0800 and I got out of report at 0730. The patient was asleep so I began looking up the 14 drugs I had to give (3 at 0800 and the other 11 at 0900) and rounding up the labs. The breakfast trays were delivered at 0800, so I went in woke patient and introduced myself, cleaned patient up a bit, and delivered breakfast. The deadline for giving the 0800 meds was 0830.

The things going on that needed to be done and that made me run behind were: 1) foley bag had been emptied and not capped properly, urine was all over the floor when I got there 2) patient was not wearing an armband so I could not give meds -- had to confirm identity, then get the armband 3) patient had not signed a consent for effexor, and I needed consent before administration (patient declined medication and did not sign consent btw) 4) patient was comfortable, no distress or pain, A & O x 3

So, I got the meds together (the shot and the iron, plus the effexor and the consent) to present to my instructor for review at 0825 and she dinged me for not doing vitals yet. Because I had not done vitals, the meds were given later than 0830. So, I didn't prioritize correctly, meaning that the meds were late and that was also the 5 rights ding... she also wrote me up for not assessing the patient properly.

Can anyone tell me how they, as a first semester student, would have handled the no -name patient with a leaking foley any differently? Or would you have just wheeled in the machine over the wet floor and taken the vitals immediately, even though you were only giving iron, an anti-D and lovonox? In any case, I could not have given the meds as I couldn't check the armband and had no clue on how to approach the identity confirmation. Advice appreciated!

A med given more than 30 minutes late? Excuse me...

BAWHAHAHAHAHAHA!

Welcome to the REAL world of nursing.

Imagine having, say, 7 pts. They ALL have 5-12 meds due at 9am. Most have BP meds and IV abx ect. It is PHYSICALLY IMPOSSIBLE to give meds EXACTLY on time. I would try to start giving 9 o'clocks at 8:30 and feel like I did a darn good job if finished by 9:30., considering CONSTANT interruption, "I need ice water, I have to use the BR NOW, I need to speak to DR Whoozywhzzit NOW, the doc in room 8 needs assist at bedside NOW, critical lab on the phone NOW, relatives on the phone NOW.... missing meds?(I would run to the pharmacy, which is 9 floors down and through a LONG winding hallway, instead of waiting the usual 3 hrs for the med to arrive) USUALLY I would finish up meds at around 10:00-10:30.

Are you sweating yet?

Geez, Val, I'm sorry that happened. Just speak up for yourself if the issue is ever brought up again. Like Brenda, I can't speak from personal experience yet, but I'm sure you're well on your way to being a great nurse.

Can't offer more than the advice already given.

Val, you rock. You're going to make an awesome nurse - of that I have no doubt. Personally, I feel you'd do great in Peds and you know why!! :chuckle

CYA is the order of the day, it is a nursing mantra. We're human, we are not robots and last I checked none of us can walk on water. :)

We had conferences today, and it was only mentioned that I have "too much empathy" for my patients. My instructor said she thinks I will make a great nurse, if I can get in there and be the nurse, then have empathy later.

In other words, I should have woken the patient up earlier. Which, by the way, is what I put under my "how I could improve".

And so, I passed clinical's and now all that is left is the final exam!

LVRN -- I am scared to death to do peds, because basically -- I have too much empathy! I would be in tears over the sick kids! I gotta get "mean", I gotta "toughen up". At least peds comes after chronic and OB so I have some time to deal with this empathy problem.

THANKS EVERYONE for your support!

Specializes in LTC, ER, ICU,.

"...and so, i passed clinical's..."

val, way to go!

school is NOTHING like the real world, can't think of anything you could have done differently that would have made any worth while difference. Really it is sad that students are not prepared for the real world of nursing, but that's just the way it is. Really craps me out that they use valuable cirriculum time to espouse culture, and socio/psycho factors then tell ppl they are too empathetic...give me a friggin break!.....Then on top of that ding you for alledged mis-prioritizing, (critical thinking).....hey if they would back down on all the touchy feely ciricculum and teach the real world skills....you know?...oh well, you will survive. Good luck on the rest of your journey...........LR

Originally posted by Furball

A med given more than 30 minutes late? Excuse me...

BAWHAHAHAHAHAHA!

Welcome to the REAL world of nursing.

Imagine having, say, 7 pts. They ALL have 5-12 meds due at 9am. Most have BP meds and IV abx ect. It is PHYSICALLY IMPOSSIBLE to give meds EXACTLY on time. I would try to start giving 9 o'clocks at 8:30 and feel like I did a darn good job if finished by 9:30., considering CONSTANT interruption, "I need ice water, I have to use the BR NOW, I need to speak to DR Whoozywhzzit NOW, the doc in room 8 needs assist at bedside NOW, critical lab on the phone NOW, relatives on the phone NOW.... missing meds?(I would run to the pharmacy, which is 9 floors down and through a LONG winding hallway, instead of waiting the usual 3 hrs for the med to arrive) USUALLY I would finish up meds at around 10:00-10:30.

Are you sweating yet?

Furball brings up a very good argument. How would an experienced nurse handle this situation? It is so different than when you are a student and working with only one or two patients.

Kris:confused: :confused: :confused: :confused:

Needing a consent for effexor? Never done that myself. And as far as the vitals??? I never was taught in school to check vitals before giving those meds. Only for BP meds and heart meds. Boy, my school must have really sucked!!!!

Specializes in Home Health.

Val, it sounds like she thinks you should have done your am assessments which includes vitals first, that is all, not that these particular meds would require VS prior to giving. I would never have done that for those meds.

No you couldn't leave the pee, b/c one time you do, and you can be SURE the pt would get OOB and slip and break a hip, so safety is a priority.

I the real world, in my own home, I do not take meds q 12 hrs, I take it twice a day. So a med was 15 min late? What is the big deal? You have to jump thru these hoops in nursing school, but in the real world, you do the best you can!

Originally posted by Vsummer1

We had conferences today, and it was only mentioned that I have "too much empathy" for my patients. My instructor said she thinks I will make a great nurse, if I can get in there and be the nurse, then have empathy later.

In other words, I should have woken the patient up earlier. Which, by the way, is what I put under my "how I could improve".

Val, I'm glad you got through clinicals. I thought you did just fine with what you had to work with. Some days all you do is put out fires, that's all, and as long as you can triage tasks appropriately, everybody comes out okay.

I had to laugh about the "waking the pt up" thing though. That is the main reason I hated working nights--I never got over feeling guilty about having to wake up ICU pts to do hourly neuro checks, vitals, etc.

consent for effexor? wtf?

Originally posted by sunnygirl272

consent for effexor? wtf?

Yep. At the facility I was at, it is required. I think all anti-d's require consent there for that matter. I didn't ask questions, I just got the consent ready.

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