Medication Error Reporting A Survey Of Nursing Staff
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journal Editorial board Rights & permissions Dispatch date of the next issue Publishers' books for review SubmitInstructions for authors Submit now Self-archiving policy Open access options Subscribe AdvertiseCorporate services Advertising Reprints and ePrints Sponsored supplements Books and custom publishing Editor in chiefYu-Chuan (Jack) Li Impact factor2.5455 Year impact factor2.631 Published on behalf ofThe International Society for Quality in Health Care Perceptions regarding medication administration errors among hospital staff nurses of South Korea You have accessRestricted access Mi-Ae You, Mi-Hyeon Choe, Geun-Ok Park, Sang-Hee Kim, Youn-Jung Son DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzv036 276-283 First http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11008438 published online: 7 June 2015 Mi-Ae YouCollege of Nursing, Ajou University, Suwon, South KoreaMi-Hyeon ChoeSoonchunhyang University Hospital, Cheonan, South KoreaGeun-Ok ParkSoonchunhyang University Hospital, Cheonan, South KoreaSang-Hee KimSoonchunhyang University Hospital, Cheonan, South KoreaYoun-Jung SonDepartment of Nursing, Soonchunhyang University, Cheonan, South Korea ArticleFigures & dataInformation & metricsExplorePDF AbstractObjective To identify reasons for medication administration errors (MAEs) and why they are unreported, and estimate the percentage of http://intqhc.oxfordjournals.org/content/27/4/276 MAEs actually reported among hospital nurses.Design A cross-sectional survey design.Setting Three university hospitals in three South Korean provinces.Participants A total of 312 hospital staff nurses were included in this study.Main outcome Medication administration errors.Results Actual MAEs were experienced by 217 nurses (69.6%) during their clinical career, whereas 149 nurses (47.8%) perceived that MAEs only occur less than 20% rate. MAEs occurred mostly during intravenous (IV) administrations. Nurses perceived that the most common reasons for MAEs were inadequate number of nurses in each working shift (4.88 ± 1.05) and administering drugs with similar names or labels (4.49 ± 0.94). The most prevalent reasons for unreported MAEs included fears of being blamed (4.36 ± 1.10) and having too much emphasis on MAEs as a measure of nursing care quality (4.32 ± 1.02). The three most frequent errors perceived by nurses for non-IV related MAEs included administering medications to the incorrect patients and incorrect medication doses and drug choices. The three most frequent IV related MAEs included incorrect infusion rates, patients and medication doses.Conclusions Nurse-staffing adequacy could be helpful to prevent MAEs among nurses as well ongoing education, and training regarding safe medicati
Antonow, A B Smith, M P Silver The objective of this article is to describe findings from a medication error http://www.pubpdf.com/pub/11008438/Medication-error-reporting-a-survey-of-nursing-staff (ME) survey, to estimate the extent of ME underreporting by comparison of survey results with written incident reports (IRs), and to determine factors associated with IR reporting of MEs. Participants were registered nurses from the 38-bed infant unit of a pediatric hospital. Most recent ME in each of four stages of the medication process was medication error classified as to: timing, nature, whether the error was prevented from the patient, patient injury, and completed IR. Full Text Link Source Status There may be more results - use the "Deep Web Search" button to help find them:Deep Web Search Search public data sources to find the full text document. Web Search Results: Similar Publications medication error reporting Dec2003 Systems factors in the reporting of serious medication errors in hospitals.J Med Syst 2003 Dec;27(6):543-51Stephanie Y Crawford, Michael R Cohen, Eskinder Tafesse Underreporting of medication errors poses a threat to quality improvement initiatives. Hospital risk management programs encourage medication error reporting for effective management of systems failures. This study involved a survey of 156 medical-surgical hospitals in the United States to evaluate systems factors associated with the reporting of serious medication errors. View Full Text PDF Listings View primary source full text article PDFs. Sep2004 Use of incident reports by physicians and nurses to document medical errors in pediatric patients.Pediatrics 2004 Sep;114(3):729-35James A Taylor, Dena Brownstein, Dimitri A Christakis, Susan Blackburn, Thomas P Strandjord, Eileen J Klein, Jaleh Shafii To describe the proportion and types of medical errors that are stated to be reported via incident report systems by physicians and nurses who care for pediatric patients and to determine attitudes about potential interventions for increasing error reports. A survey on use of incid