Is It Possible to Never Make an Error? The Perfect Nurse Fallacy

If nurses are well-trained and careful, can we prevent patient harm? What does it take to get through a hectic nursing shift without making an error? This article attempts to answer these questions and more. I’ve included a personal safety checklist as well.

Mistakes Were Made

Is it possible to get through an entire nursing career without making a mistake? If nurses are well-trained and careful, can we prevent patient harm? What does it take to get through a hectic nursing shift without making an error? These are the questions that motivate me as an educator and a nurse researcher.

I wrote an article a while back talking about how nurses, despite our best efforts, make mistakes that sometimes lead to patient harm (Why Do We Continue to Harm Patients?) At the end of the article I gave a survey asking how many of my readers had made errors. Of the 39 folks who voted, 54% of you said you had never made an error. Compare that to the 18% who weren’t sure.

I’m going to make an argument that more mistakes and errors occur than you think by asking another question, how do we know an error has been made? The most common way healthcare organizations track error is through self-report, which is voluntary. We have to know we’ve made a mistake, be willing to report it, know how to report it, have time to report it and feel safe enough to report it before anyone finds out we’ve made an error. That’s a lot to ask for nurses who are often overworked, underpaid and who have zero job security. The evidence suggests we make many more errors than are reported. In one study, over a four-day period, pharmacists, RNs, LPNs and pharmacy technicians directly observed 2556 doses of medication administration in 36 hospitals across the US. They observed 300 errors (11.7%). An in-depth chart review over that same four-day period detected 17 errors (0.7%). And incident reports? You guessed it - there was 1 – giving an error rate of 0.4%.1In another study clinical evidence from 6 different direct observation studies was reviewed, and the differences were even more startling: “true” error detected by direct observation was 65.6%. Chart review yielded an error rate of 3.7%. Self-report gave an error rate of 0.2%.2

Fundamentals

I recently taught fundamentals of nursing to some brand-new BSN students. They had to do a simulated medication pass, and I used a checklist to grade them. It looked something like this:

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My students struggled with performing the three checks each and every time. (I added that they also needed to check the expiration date, something else they couldn’t seem to remember). I know nerves get in the way, and I was supportive and gave cues when needed, because at their level, cues are needed. We only expect a student nurse who is about to graduate to be able to do a med pass correctly, perfectly, every single time.

What inspired me to write this article was the experience my newbies had at the clinical site. After 10 weeks in the sim-lab, struggling to learn the basics of nursing care, things like bed making, bed baths, head to toe assessment, medication administration, they finally got to go to an actual facility and observe RNs, LPNs, and CNAs do the real job of direct patient care. They were incredibly nervous about talking to a patient for the first time, so worried they would make a mistake, say the wrong thing, mess up.At the end of the first day, we met for post-conference and some faces were shining with joy, I kid you not, at the realization that I can do this!There were also some hushed conversations about the reality of nursing. See if any of these quotes look or feel familiar:

“She didn’t tell the patient what any of the meds were for.”

“None of them do the three checks.”

“My nurse didn’t even check the patient’s arm-band.”

“She gave the wrong dose of insulin, and she realized it afterwards, but I never saw her tell the patient or fill out an error report. I could tell she felt really embarrassed.”

What Are We Teaching Kids These Days?

Do you remember in nursing school when they taught us about medication administration?

Here’s a list of what we are supposed to know about each and every medication (and I am sure I have missed a few):

  • Generic vs. trade
  • Classifications
  • Forms
  • Pharmacokinetics
  • Therapeutic vs. side effects
  • Allergies
  • Interactions
  • Timing (peak, trough)
  • Common schedules (AC, STAT)
  • Route
  • Method of measurement
  • Interdisciplinary (pharmacy, prescriber)
  • Types of orders (standing, PRN)
  • Distribution systems

Back in 2004, when I was a student, they were still doing five rights: dose, patient, drug, time and route. I did a little research and discovered that the five rights were first seen in The Nursing Sister: A Manual for Candidates and Novices of Hospital Communities,1893.3 Since then, the number of rights has increased, one school even has 12! Some of those additional rights include things like documentation, client education, response, right to refuse. Do you remember how we were taught to check all the rights three times? The three checks: Check 1: when medications are pulled from where they are stored (med drawer, dispensing machine/Pyxis); Check 2: when preparing the medications for administration; Check 3: at the patient’s bedside.

I have three problems with this whole set up: 1) there’s no evidence to support this methodology; 2) it places all of the responsibility for patient safety on the nurse; 3) it only works if you do it, and we aren’t doing it. Our responsibility is to administer medication as prescribed while preventing error and patient harm(that’s straight from a Fundamentals texbook4) yet the error rate hasn’t changed.5

We are the last line of defense – physicians and advanced care practitioners prescribe medications, pharmacists fill the prescription, and the nurse gives the medication. As we go through our daily routine of checking and re-checking, nurses prevent up to 70% of prescribing and dispensing errors before they reach the patient.6 We prevent error by intervening when we see a medication order that doesn’t make sense, or identifying an allergy that was missed, or investigating with the patient and family to discover a previous medication issue not found upon initial assessment. Despite our best efforts, nurses may commit between 26% and 38% of medication errors.6In a 2010 survey, 78% nurses admitted to making a medication error, and these are just the ones they were aware of.7

The Fallacy Of The Careless Nurse

Some folks who read an article highlighting the nurses’ role in patient harm get angry, and I don’t blame them. Nurses are often vilified for errors that reach the patient. Nurses are at the sharp end of the stick – we are the last stop for safety. When things go wrong, we are often blamed. Yes, there are instances of bad nurses who do bad things. There are incompetent and careless nurses. There are nurses who don’t care. But I believe they are few and far between. What I am suggesting, is that it isn’t always our fault. I’m suggesting that healthcare systems are error-prone places. I’m suggesting that no matter what we do, errors will occur. Healthcare is just too complex. The odds are stacked against us. Statistics show that more than one error occurs per patient per hospital day.8I don’t believe there are that many careless nurses out there. I believe the system is deeply flawed. The culture of nursing is such that many of us are unwilling to even consider that we have made an error. And as you can see, we continue to teach our nursing students that just being carefulwill somehow magically protect them from making a mistake.

What To Do?

Nurses appear to believe that they should be capable of administering medications without errors, regardless of the external circumstances. When you ask nurses about error, we typically believe it’s all our fault. In 2003, 779 nurses were polled, and 79% agreed that medication errors occur when a nurse carelessly neglects to follow the 5 rights. 958% believed that the commission of a medication error was indicative of nursing incompetence. In 2008 the same poll was conducted, and those numbers have only increased.10This study highlights that negative opinions and individual blame continue to be associated with error making.

In the article I wrote about the role of nurses in error, I asked you for solutions and here is a list of your answers:

  • Staffing (over 50% of those who commented on my article suggested that staffing is at the root of the role nurses play in medication error.)
  • Incentives and benefits for senior, experienced nurses to stay at the bedside
  • Barcode medication administration
  • Electronic charting
  • Improving critical thinking
  • Prioritizing patient needs
  • Nurses are understaffed and overworked, caring for sicker patients in greater amounts with less support, experience and training
  • Total overhaul of BSN programs
  • Keep your head down, keep quiet and stay employed

Personal Safety Checklist

I agree with your ideas, but I’m not sure how to get them implemented, other than to tell you to go work at a magnet hospital in a state with safe staffing laws. I’m working very hard on improving critical thinking in my nursing students, but from the perspective of a BSN instructor, I can tell you a total overhaul isn’t on the horizon. I want you to know there are a few things we can do to safeguard our patients and our license. As a Certified Patient Safety Professional, a long-time nurse educator, a nurse who practices at the bedside, and former patient safety officer, I recommend nurses use the following checklist for personal safety measures. Anything you can complete from the following list has evidence behind it to support improved patient safety. As nurses, keeping patients free from harm is our goal, so why not pick one and get it checked off?

  • Education: BSN, MSN (patients cared for by nurses with higher degrees have better outcomes)
  • Nurse led research (nurses at the bedside are the best folks to initiate research that will make a difference in patient safety)
  • Certification (patients cared for by certified nurses have better outcomes)
  • Self-care (nurses who are stressed out and fatigued are more likely to make an error)
  • Ongoing training – look for the following components in your continuing education:
  • High quality CE (The ANA has some great free CE, and so do I!)
  • Simulation (So many studies show a positive relationship between high-fidelity simulation and improved patient outcomes)
  • Patient safety focus
  • Charting (Chart everything. Chart everything. Chart everything – for your safety as well as your patients’).
  • Use of checklists whenever possible (research shows use of checklists reduces error)

Speak up! Join the ANA and contribute to the Political Action Coalition today! If every nurse gave $1, we would have $3 million dollars to fund lobbying efforts to get safe staffing laws passed in all states. If we do nothing, nothing will change.11

End Note

Here’s one final item I have removed from the checklist because it isn’t a goal, though it is most likely a certainty in your life. The odds that a nurse will make it through a career without making a mistake are close to zero.

Previous involvement in error (nurses who have made errors that they recognize and take responsibility for are less likely to make them in the future)

I wrote a story about a wonderful, well-trained, careful nurse who made a mistake that harmed a p.html), and I encourage to you read it. It inspired me and I hope it inspires you as well. We must admit to and report error. If we don’t, we can’t know what problems need to be fixed. For more information on how organizations can improve, please read: This Nurse Quit, Will You? What to look for in an organization.

Specializes in Education, Informatics, Patient Safety.
On 1/24/2019 at 11:29 PM, Susie2310 said:

In my opinion, one of the problems is that nursing education today consists of much less hands on practice at the bedside taking care of patients than in the past, and practicing skills in Sim lab for 10 weeks (as you mentioned in your article) and then going to the facility to "observe" staff providing care instead of actually providing hands on patient care under one's clinical instructor's supervision means that students are far less prepared to practice than in the past. When I was a student we learned/performed the skills in the skills lab, were checked off for competency, and then performed the skills on patients we were assigned to in the hospital under our clinical instructor's supervision.

You seem to be contradicting yourself when on one hand you say that medication administration is far too complex for individual nurses to be held responsible for medication errors (when they administered the medication) the majority of the time, yet on the other hand you reference your students' training (10 weeks in Sim lab and then at the facility to "observe" the staff providing care) while stating that BSN trained nurses have been shown to have superior patient outcomes - what particular outcomes are you talking about? Your comments lead me to presume you are not talking about safe medication administration outcomes.

The five/six rights are not obsolete and are still referenced in nursing procedure books (I have a current edition of a reputable one) for medication administration. The five rights work to prevent errors, and do prevent errors, but more knowledge of medications and of health care processes is necessary in order to administer medications safely. Vigilance and critical thinking are necessary also; one cannot just go on autopilot. You said the five rights only works when we do it. Well, of course, and the recent thread about the Vecuronium error contains many references to safely administering medications and using the five rights; did you read that thread? A number of nurses who posted on that thread made the point that the nurse is the last defense before a medication error reaches the patient, and therefore needs to have a personal practice with a robust method for preventing medication errors, including the five rights. Nurses are held individually accountable for their practice by the state Boards of Nursing.

Thank you so much for reading and commenting. I agree that hands on practice is a severe limitation for nursing students these days. It is becoming more and more difficult to find facilities who will allow students to come and learn how to be nurses. Even when we can find facilities, students are often very limited in what they are allowed to do. Many places don't allow students to even pass medications any longer.

The point I am trying to make in the article is that though nurses are ultimately responsible for patient safety - you are so correct - we are the last line of defense, medication administration is complex and that considering other options and ideas for supporting safety is important.

Outcomes that are improved by having BSNs and MSNs are the bedside include decreased patient mortality (which may or may not be caused by med error - that statistic is not available), decreased hospital stay, and reduced readmission rates.

I agree that we must be held accountable, I also think that institutions pass the buck to nurses. It's a fine line, and a tough one to balance. I am advocating for nurses to understand that admitting to error is the first step towards preventing it in the future, and that we shouldn't be penalized for admitting that we have made mistakes.

Specializes in Education, Informatics, Patient Safety.
On 1/25/2019 at 2:52 PM, Miss.LeoRN said:

Sometimes I feel like the persons who write these "checklists" never have actually worked on a floor. What is the rationale behind a head to toe prior to giving medication? I can't imagine having to head to toe my patients any time I give them their medications. Or taking their vitals that many times, unless the particular med I am calling for needs current vitals and they hadn't already been taken in the past 15 minutes. It's bad enough that when I started my patients' all looked at me as if I were stupid and like I was an idiot every time I went to give them meds and I was asking them "name and date of birth" for the 6th time.. ?

I completely agree - and as a new instructor I have to be very careful how much I criticize the status quo. It is my passion to move nursing education forward so that what we teach students is more closely related to reality. I also think the culture of nursing gets us into bad habits. I hate that there are seasoned nurses who make newer nurses feel "dumb" for doing the right thing (not to mention patients doing it as well - I never even thought of that!). I try to warn my students ahead of time that this may happen, but it's so frustrating. I really appreciate your comment.

Specializes in Education, Informatics, Patient Safety.
On 1/26/2019 at 6:23 PM, JKL33 said:

It would help if it were clarified that, as I recall, the poll in question did not ask if one had ever made an error, it asked if one had ever made error that harmed a patient. Implicit but not stated would be the idea that one would need to be aware of harm caused in order to answer the question in the affirmative.

Sure, everyone could have answered "not sure" - but I am guessing people answered based on whether or not they are aware of having made an error that caused harm to a patient. Since that's what the question asked.

Good data reported in a genuine manner is important.

Thank you so much for pointing out my mistake.

Specializes in Education, Informatics, Patient Safety.
On 1/26/2019 at 6:27 PM, morelostthanfound said:

Absolutely-this ⬆️. 54% of nurses having never made an error? That is an absolute statistical impossibility-sorry! Having worked in direct care for many years and administered thousands of medications (as most acute care nurses do)-regardless of one's cautiousness or attention to detail, a med error, unfortunately, is an eventuality. Also don't get me started on the recommendation to join the ANA to promote patient safety. The ANA's last position statement on nurse/patient ratios made it abundantly clear to me that they were in bed with large healthcare associations who are fighting tooth and nail this very important safety measure.

I erroneously reported that 54% of nurses who responded to my article stated they had never made an error - but I should have said they stated they had never made an error that harmed a patient.

Do you have any solutions for how to promote patient safety other than joining the ANA?

Specializes in Education, Informatics, Patient Safety.

I should have posted this in the article - evidence for improved patient outcomes when cared for by a BSN:

"hospitals in Pennsylvania had “a substantial survival advantage” if they were treated in hospitals with higher proportions of BSN-prepared nurses. That groundbreaking study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, found that a 10-percent increase in the number BSN-prepared nurses reduced the likelihood of patient death by 5 percent.

The link between nurse education and patient outcomes was confirmed in 2011, when Aiken published a study in Medical Care that found that a 10 percent increase in the proportion of BSN-prepared nurses reduced the risk of death by 5 percent. In 2013, Aiken co-authored a study in Health Affairs that found that hospitals that hired more BSN-prepared nurses between 1999 and 2006 experienced greater declines in mortality than hospitals that did not add more BSN-prepared nurses. “We’ve established this association over and over again,” she said. “If hospitals really want to improve care, they should hire more nurses with bachelor’s degrees.”

https://www.rwjf.org/en/library/articles-and-news/2014/04/building-the-case-for-more-highly-educated-nurses.html

Specializes in Education, Informatics, Patient Safety.
8 minutes ago, SafetyNurse1968 said:

Thank you so much for pointing out my mistake.

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On 1/26/2019 at 7:40 PM, mtnNurse. said:

Susie, I think you are missing the point of why some places give nurses a way to report mistakes with no threat of penalty. As you said yourself, if there's a possible penalty, mistakes will often go unreported. On the other hand, if there's no possible penalty, we can learn from the mistakes made and investigate the root causes. We are better able to find ways to prevent future mistakes if more mistakes are reported which will happen if there is no threat of penalty.

Penalizing nurses for errors will not reduce errors. Understaffing, a very common problem, will cause mistakes (this seems like such common sense to me that it baffles me when people wonder why mistakes are made) -- a nurse will have much less time to ensure safety when assigned too many patients. Also, as people have pointed out, nurses are humans and humans make mistakes. No matter whether nurses are held more accountable as you wish, mistakes will be made for these reasons at least. If every nurse who has ever made a mistake was removed from their job as you may wish, there would be even fewer staff causing even more hazardous conditions to care for your loved one.

I agree with you that the public has a right to competent, safe care. But if you want to hold someone accountable, do so with whoever is deciding to give the nurses (or doctors or others) more patients than they can safely take care of. What is your solution? If we fire everyone as soon as they make a mistake, will that cause hospitals to suddenly decide to hire enough staff so that mistakes are more easily avoided?

There is no hospital, nowhere, that reporting an error causes a penalty for the nurse reporting it. In fact, the Joint Commission Requires it.

2 hours ago, Jory said:

There is no hospital, nowhere, that reporting an error causes a penalty for the nurse reporting it. In fact, the Joint Commission Requires it.

We see stories here all of the time from nurses who were fired for medication errors, and I'm not talking about errors that killed a patient. Anecdotes, I understand.

Specializes in Travel, Home Health, Med-Surg.
7 hours ago, Jory said:

There is no hospital, nowhere, that reporting an error causes a penalty for the nurse reporting it. In fact, the Joint Commission Requires it.

That thinking is just a little naïve, it happens all the time.