NURS FPX 4010 Assessment 4: Stakeholder Presentation
NURS FPX 4010 Assessment 4: Stakeholder Presentation
Plan Proposal For Medication Errors
CAPELLA UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF NURSING AND HEALTH SCIENCES
Mar 2021
Content
NURS FPX4010 Assessment 4: Stakeholder Presentation
- Organizational and patient issue of medication errors
- Evidence-based interdisciplinary plan
- Implementing interdisciplinary plan
- Managing human and financial resources
- Evidence-based criteria to evaluate success of plan
- Evidence-based criteria to evaluate the outcomes
NURS FPX4010 Assessment 4: Stakeholder Presentation
Medication errors
- Near misses and adverse effects may harm the patients
- Medication errors are one of the major reasons for adverse effects
- The errors affect organizational functions and processes
- Medication errors increase work burden
- Medication errors lead to blame culture and conflicts
- It is difficult to identify errors at times
Types of medication errors
- Ordering or prescription errors
- Transcribing errors
- Documenting errors
- Dispensing errors
- Administering errors
- Dosage errors
NURS FPX4010 Assessment 4: Stakeholder Presentation
Effects of medication errors
- Delayed care
- High cost of care
- Mortality and morbidity
- Long-term side effects
- Sense of guilt, disappointment, fear and inadequacy
- Lower patient trust
PDSA Cycle
- Plan
- Identify and create a team
- Create aim and objectives
- Analyze current approach
- Identify potential interdisciplinary solution
NURS FPX4010 Assessment 4: Stakeholder Presentation
Evidence-based interdisciplinary plan
- Do phase
- Role-based interdisciplinary team
- Error reporting system with physician order entry
- Direct communication channel in reporting system
- Checklist to compare prescription, EHR, dosage, and medicine
- Bar-code-based medication system
- Shared decision-making with root-cause analysis
Evidence-based interdisciplinary plan
- Report any changes in packaging or brand
- Do not use abbreviations
- Limit interferences during drug administration through
- Tabards
- Nurse collaboration
- Communication protocols for faster response
Study and Act Phase
- Examine the results to check
- Analyze error rates
- Calculate response rate
- Compare cost with benefit
- Analyze burnout and perspectives
- Analyze patient satisfaction
- Observed side-effects
- Identify need for change
Managing Financial & human resources
- Motivate the health care professionals to increase performance
- Increase nurse to patient ratio
- Manage burden and schedule the work
- Solve conflicts
- Provide support, incentives, and resources
- Procure error reporting, bar-code, and checklist system
- Manage finances without compromising with quality of care
NURS FPX4010 Assessment 4: Stakeholder Presentation
Criteria to evaluate success
- Reduced medication errors
- Increase in response rate
- Reduction in cost
- Reduction in burnout
- Increase in patient satisfaction
Criteria
- Faster root-cause analyze
- Increase in effective communication
- Higher job satisfaction
- Increased trust in patients
- Increased computer science competencies and skills
NURS FPX4010 Assessment 4: Stakeholder Presentation
Conclusion
Medication errors include prescription, dispensing, dosage calculation, and drug administration errors. As stakeholders’ units are involved, an integrated system with EHR, medication reporting and communication, bar-code, tabards to reduce interferences, a checklist for verification, and education and training staff are beneficial in reducing errors and promote quality culture.
Essay NURS FPX 6216 – Assessment 4 Preparing and Managing a Capital Budget
References
- Bosma, B., Hunfeld, N., Roobol-Meuwese, E., Dijkstra, T., Coenradie, S., & Blenke, A. et al. (2020). Voluntarily reported prescribing, monitoring and medication transfer errors in intensive care units in The Netherlands. International Journal Of Clinical Pharmacy, 43(1), 66-76. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11096-020-01101-5
- Desai, M., Patel, N., Shah, S., Patel, P., & Gandhi, A. (2016). A study of medication errors in a tertiary care hospital. Perspectives In Clinical Research, 7(4), 168. https://doi.org/10.4103/2229-3485.192039
- Kang, H., Park, H., Oh, J., & Lee, E. (2017). Perception of reporting medication errors including near-misses among Korean hospital pharmacists. Medicine, 96(39), e7795. https://doi.org/10.1097/md.0000000000007795
- Kavanagh, A., & Donnelly, J. (2020). A lean approach to improve medication administration safety by reducing distractions and interruptions. Journal Of Nursing Care Quality, 35(4), E58-E62. https://doi.org/10.1097/ncq.0000000000000473
- Musharyanti, L., Claramita, M., Haryanti, F., & Dwiprahasto, I. (2019). Why do nursing students make medication errors? A qualitative study in Indonesia. Journal Of Taibah University Medical Sciences, 14(3), 282-288. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtumed.2019.04.002
- Palese, A., Ferro, M., Pascolo, M., Dante, A., & Vecchiato, S. (2019). “I am administering medication—please do not interrupt me”: red tabards preventing interruptions as perceived by surgical patients. Journal Of Patient Safety, 15(1), 30-36. https://doi.org/10.1097/pts.0000000000000209
- Salar, A., Kiani, F., & Rezaee, N. (2020). Preventing the medication errors in hospitals: A qualitative study. International Journal Of Africa Nursing Sciences, 13, 100235. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijans.2020.100235
- Schmidt, K., Taylor, A., & Pearson, A. (2017). Reduction of Medication Errors: A Unique Approach. Journal Of Nursing Care Quality, 32(2), 150-156. https://doi.org/10.1097/ncq.0000000000000217
- Stewart, D., MacLure, K., Pallivalapila, A., Dijkstra, A., Wilbur, K., & Wilby, K. et al. (2020). Views and experiences of decision‐makers on organisational safety culture and medication errors. International Journal Of Clinical Practice, 74(9). https://doi.org/10.1111/ijcp.13560
- Thompson, K., Swanson, K., Cox, D., Kirchner, R., Russell, J., & Wermers, R. et al. (2018). Implementation of bar-code medication administration to reduce patient harm. Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Innovations, Quality & Outcomes, 2(4), 342-351. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mayocpiqo.2018.09.001
- Trakulsunti, Y., Antony, J., Dempsey, M., & Brennan, A. (2020). Reducing medication errors using lean six sigma methodology in a Thai hospital: an action research study. International Journal Of Quality & Reliability Management, 38(1), 339-362. https://doi.org/10.1108/ijqrm-10-2019-0334
NURS FPX4010 Assessment 4: Stakeholder Presentation
NURS FPX 4010 Assessment 4: Stakeholder Presentation