Published May 9, 2018
UsernameNotFound, BSN, RN
11 Posts
I'm polling the audience here [you].
Quick scenario: Insulin (Humalog) vial is empty. We need more, though not urgently or imminently. Pharmacy is not answering the phone right now. RN takes empty vial and syringe to another unit, grabs their insulin vial (already in use), draws some up, and shoots it into the empty vial. RN returns to home unit and says, "Here we go... got some!"
Seems pretty heinous.
Your thoughts?
Sour Lemon
5,016 Posts
I'm polling the audience here [you].Quick scenario: Insulin (Humalog) vial is empty. We need more, though not urgently or imminently. Pharmacy is not answering the phone right now. RN takes empty vial and syringe to another unit, grabs their insulin vial (already in use), draws some up, and shoots it into the empty vial. RN returns to home unit and says, "Here we go... got some!"Seems pretty heinous.Your thoughts?
Yikes! I've gone to another unit to borrow a multi-patient vile and draw up a dose, but injecting "something" into an empty insulin vial is all sorts of wrong.
VivaLasViejas, ASN, RN
22 Articles; 9,996 Posts
Ain't happening where I come from. That's crazy! She could have squirted *anything* in that vial. Nope, nope, nope.
Guest219794
2,453 Posts
What could possibly go wrong?
cleback
1,381 Posts
She would have been better off just borrowing the whole vial.
ruby_jane, BSN, RN
3,142 Posts
^Exactly.^
Am I paranoid? Not really. That just...creeped me out. Why not bring the whole vial so everyone could see date, dose, etc? If she had time to go to the other unit, might she have had time to go to the pharmacy?