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.

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 Tele, ICU, Staff Development.
8 minutes ago, mtnNurse. said:

THANK YOU both for pointing out what I think it most always boils down to -- patients aren't safe because of unrealistic work loads and not enough staff. No amount of new initiatives to fix safety issues will change the fact that when you don't have enough staff or when unrealistic work loads are placed on staff, patients will be harmed. No amount of warning labels on vials, multiple new steps of verification on Pyxis, signs stuck on doors and above beds, second nurse witnessing, cameras in med rooms, or flying mini-drones with video cameras around the heads of RNs all day is going to prevent a patient death so long as there's money to be made from short-staffing.

THIS

Specializes in Tele, ICU, Staff Development.
On 1/15/2019 at 5:34 PM, Dodongo said:

So wait, I'm new to this party... but you are telling me that the nurse pulled a med (that s/he was OBVIOUSLY not familiar with) from the accudose, and went through all the trouble of *reconstituting* it (which means she had to read the package insert or something to make sure she reconstituted it appropriately!!) and never stopped for one second to think s/he should look it up? I mean, it's hard to explain this one away...

Right but why was she put in the position of a help all nurse if she was so inexperienced?

No one will ever see the MBA/CEO or know their name - staffing for safe ratios and patient safety is not their concern. The responsibility will fall on the nurse. These jobs are like wolves in sheep's clothing.

8 hours ago, Nurse Beth said:

Right but why was she put in the position of a help all nurse if she was so inexperienced?

Not an excuse. Doesn't matter how experienced you are. If you are giving an unfamiliar med you freaking look it up! She clearly wasn't familiar with Versed.

I don't see how this one can be explained in her favor. I have had supervisors get upset with me because I told them I wouldn't accept more patients because it was unsafe and I wouldn't be able to provide safe care. One threatened to fire me and I told her to be sure she gave me enough copies to send to my attorney and the board of nursing. They're threatening people with firing and loss of licensure. Those who don't know their rights will submit to the threats. KNOW YOUR RIGHTS!

Having said that, this nurse should have, at minimum, contacted pharmacy to verify or ask about the med. I contact pharmacies all the time to inquire about meds I can't find information on, or I contact the doctor to ask "Why are you doing this *med or procedure*? Please explain it to me because I'm unfamiliar with this and would like to learn more." They're either surprised or glad that I took the initiative to learn more.

Specializes in ER.

My opinion is that she was one of those people who skated through school and her short nursing career by always cutting corners. The hospital probably liked her because she was a time efficient jack of all trades. She may be very personable as well.

It's like the carpenter who gets by for years not using the safety equipment on his saw; one day it will catch up with him and he'll lose some fingers.

1 minute ago, Emergent said:

It's like the carpenter who gets by for years not using the safety equipment on his saw; one day it will catch up with him and he'll lose some fingers.

Yes, but sadly he not only lost his fingers he cut off his co-worker's head in the process.

Specializes in ER.

For what it's worth, I researched this gal online. She and her husband have a 40 acre farm and raise hair sheep.

Screenshot_20190206-073259_Chrome.jpg
On ‎12‎/‎1‎/‎2018 at 4:59 PM, TigraRN said:

Mandatory double verification would be helpful for paralytic as well. If we have another RN witness insulin, heparin, amio, why not do the same with vecuronium?

That's an interesting point. I wonder though paralytics are given for intubation which is usually an emergency so I don't know if it's practical. I like the idea though.

I sure hope you're just trolling Wuzzie and don't really think you're above this woman's mistake. Yikes!

20 minutes ago, Crow31 said:

I sure hope you're just trolling Wuzzie and don't really think you're above this woman's mistake. Yikes!

I would never say I don’t make mistakes but I can most definitely say that I have never, ever made a series of such poor decisions and disregarded safety measures as this nurse did and I never will. I don’t give medications that I am unfamiliar with without first looking them up. I monitor my patients appropriately. I ask for help when I need it. I do not allow myself to be rushed to the point of dangerously cutting corners. My one and only med error was giving PO Versed because I failed to check the armband and didn’t realize that the beds had been switched by accident when they were brought back from X-ray within 10 minutes of each other. You can bet I monitored her like crazy and never again assumed I know who a patient was. It scared the crap out of me. I can and I will say I am above making the kind of mistake the Vandy nurse made because of that med error I made and I am not ashamed to say it. Call me a troll if you wish but you’re wrong.

Specializes in ED, ICU, Prehospital.
47 minutes ago, Crow31 said:

That's an interesting point. I wonder though paralytics are given for intubation which is usually an emergency so I don't know if it's practical. I like the idea though.

So just an aside.

I received a transfer pt from a neighboring state. Came by ambulance. ACLS protocol, so ACLS crew.

Guy was intubated, so he needed a lot of care. For those RNs who don't take care of intubated pts, or have ever seen one intubated, you (USUALLY, if you're a decent doc) give not just a paralytic, but you also give a sedative as well as a pain relief measure.

This guy was supposed to have a propofol drip going, to keep him sedated for he 4.5 hour long ride.

The ambulance crew didn't have a pump and the sending facility didn't see fit to LEND THEM ONE. So...and here is the absolute scariest solution I could have come up with, besides extubation and bagging...

They gave the ACLS crew (no RN or MD on board) two syringes of propofol and instructed them on how to dose.

When the pt arrived, I was handed a known violent psychiatric patient who had overdosed on handfulls of unknown medications--on nothing.

They had run out of propofol en route. They had either dosed the patient wrong---or this patient was (and I suspect this is the case) just so drug tolerant---and they had to "improvise".

They used rocuronium to "keep the patient sedated".

If I had not been too busy trying to save this guy's life (ICU)---I would have had these two in the RN Mgrs office right then and there. They bolted as soon as they saw my reaction. I usually have to sign for patients, but these guys left. They left a zoll as well. Never came back for it.

This is the state of medicine now in some quarters. TPTB want to pay pennies and require the fewest number of actual, experienced, qualified individuals to do these jobs. If they hired qualified, they'd have to pay for qualified.

I saw a documentary called, "Tell me and I will forget" about the prehospital situation in S. Africa. Watch it. Tell me that administrators and governments and hospitals "do the right thing" by the patients they claim to serve.

My feelings about Ms. Vaught are well documented. However. Hospitals and administrators are enabling this environment.

We hire new grads into critical and sensitive areas where historically, a nurse was required to hone skills in less critical areas, and only move up once PROVEN to be skilled enough to do the job.

Nursing schools are not emphasizing actual nursing care, they are concentrating on "how to further your career" by ....more education. Pharmacology, biochemistry, even medical terminology are being phased out, because "it's too hard" for students to do, and the graduation numbers have to stay high, with the NCLEX pass rates staying high--in order to keep those programs open and student dollars/loans flowing.

Everybody wants to be the boss. Every RN I know wants to be an NP or a CNL or some type of "desk job" so they can get out of direct patient care--they don't give a rat's rump about the projects that they do, the burdensome effect of their ladder climbing "EBP Project" that actually forces floor nurses to do more and more documentation or procedure---thereby less and less actual patient care. All these types care about is getting their Nurse 3 or MSN---and the rest of us have to deal with their cockamamie idea that they sold to management, who all they can hear is..."COST SAVINGS!!!" And now we've got locked IV setups in a room across the unit that will now take me 15 minutes to retrieve while my patient is crashing and needs access. Because you know....vented patients routinly steal IV catheters out of bedside tables.

Some mental deficient thought that one up at my last place of employment and all it did was add 2000 steps to my day and endanger lives. But that mental deficient got her Nurse 3 out of that assinine project.

The old joke about going to the moon in a rocketship built by the lowest bidder---this is exactly what business does. How can we produce...the cheapest input for the most expensive output? How can we make the most money and still not kill everyone that comes through the doors?

This won't change, not until every hospital is unionized and nurses have power and a seat at the table. AND I DON'T MEAN NPs and DNPs. I mean...floor nurses, in the trenches, every day schmoes---having a say in what happens in their units.