Half of all hospital drug injections are wrong
00:01 28 March 03
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99993560     

Half of all drug injections given intravenously in hospitals are done
wrongly, a new study reveals, with third of these being potentially
dangerous.

British researchers uncovered the disturbing level of errors when they
examined drugs given intravenously by nurses in two hospitals in the
UK. They believe the rate of mistakes they found is likely to be
representative of practice across Europe and the US.

Nick Barber and Katja Taxis, at the School of Pharmacy, London, tracked
the preparation and administration of over 400 intravenous (IV) doses
given to patients on 10 different wards in the hospitals. "We were
surprised about how commonly errors occurred," say Barber. "But not all
of these were serious."

However, the error rate they calculated from their data predicts one
serious error every day in every hospital in the UK, which is a
concern, he says.

The most common mistakes were injecting doses of concentrated drugs too
rapidly and preparing drugs incorrectly, by either using the wrong dose
or dissolving them in the wrong solution. All could be fatal in certain
circumstances.

Speed kills

For some drugs, the speed at which it enters the body is crucial,
Barber explains. If they are injected too fast, they can induce
anaphylaxis - a life-threatening allergic reaction.

"This is because there is a load of potent foreign chemical shooting
around your body - if it hits the brain or heart it can have a marked
effect," he said. But injecting a drug slowly, for example, over three
minutes can be physically difficult for health care staff.

One of the three "potentially severe" errors Barber and Taxis in their
study was of this type - with the antibiotic vancomycin being given too
quickly. However, a pharmacist observer for the study intervened before
any harm was done.

The second severe error occurred when a patient was nearly injected
with an IV preparation containing five times the correct dose of
heparin - which stops the blood clotting. "Wrong dose errors are the
ones most likely to cause harm," notes Barber.

The third potentially lethal error was when an intensive care team
infusing a patient with adrenalin ran out of the drug and had not
prepared a second infusion in time.

Barber says the key to tackling such errors was to improve nurse
training. He says there would also be a role for companies to develop a
simple pump to help nurses administer drugs slowly.

Journal reference: British Medical Journal (vol 326, p 684)


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