Medicine Management Skills for Nurses. Claire Boyd

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Название Medicine Management Skills for Nurses
Автор произведения Claire Boyd
Жанр Медицина
Серия
Издательство Медицина
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119807971



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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#fb3_img_img_5859fe66-af6e-56f5-ac8e-81a96b7c81d4.jpg" alt="c01i005"/> Question 1.3

       Apart from killing the patient, what is the worst thing you can do when you have made a drug error?

      Worldwide Facts and Figures

      Some facts and figures concerning drug errors worldwide:

       Worldwide: 17% of medication errors involve errors in calculations.

       Almost 50% of all intravenous injections feature a mistake, and the number of patients requiring intravenous therapy is increasing. In medicines management, not only do we have to contend with long, hard to pronounce drug names, but we need to get our heads around all the abbreviations, including Latin ones!

      We have all seen the medic on the TV hospital soap opera shouting ‘adrenaline stat!’ in the emergency room but what does ‘stat’ actually mean? Well, it means we need to be conversant with Latin abbreviations, that's what it means.

Activity 1.1

      Here is a list of Latin abbreviations used when prescribing. What do they mean?

STAT OM QDS
AC ON QQH
BD PC TDS
OD PRN TID

      

We tend to use specific accepted abbreviations in health care to do with medicines, such as mg, pro re nata (PRN), IV, etc. but not mcg as we write microgrammes in full so as not to get confused with mg. Healthcare workers are told not to use abbreviations in their written care plans, medical records, etc. as mistakes can happen. Terms may have two meanings: for instance, DOA can be taken to mean dead on arrival or date of admission.

      There are many medical abbreviations you will see in practice in patients' medical notes. You will also see them used throughout this book. See how many of them you can work out. Don't worry if it is all alien to you, you can find the answers at the back of this book.

      Activity 1.2

AF DKA INR
BNF DM MAOI
BP DVT MHRA
CHD GI MI
COPD GTN NG
CR IDDM NHS
DH NMC NICE
NPSA OTC NIDDM
NSAID WHO PEG
PPI GP CD

      DID YOU KNOW?

      Doctors would often write abbreviations in patients notes – often being very derogatory to them! Thankfully this practice is not seen so much today. Here are just a few:

       LOBNH Lights on but nobody home

       TEETH Tried everything else, try homoeopathy

       PIP Pyjama Induced Paralysis

       TMB Too many birthdays

      It has been found that Primary Care Trusts could save almost £7 million each year if GPs prescribed more efficiently. Wastage costs the NHS approximately £200 million. I'm sure we have all met the elderly neighbour with bottles of pills dating back 10 years or more collecting dust in their bathroom cabinets. As health carers we all need to deliver better patient education, explaining why that course of antibiotics that the GP prescribed needs to be completed, even if the patient is feeling better.

      Here's a question: what do you think about schemes to recycle drugs back to the pharmacist to be redistributed to other patients? What if the bottles have been opened and the drugs spilled over a dirty floor and put back in the bottle (perhaps even licked by the dog!). Would you like to take them? Only use sealed bottles and unopened blister packs, I hear you say, but what if these had been stored on top of a heater for the last six months and their active ingredients have now become unstable?

      The medication process is made up of four parts.

       Prescribing: it is often the nurse who notices that a doctor has prescribed something to which the patient is allergic, perhaps because the nurse knows the patient better.

       Dispensing and preparation: a nurse should not use trade names for drugs as confusion may occur, for example Voltarol instead of diclofenac sodium. Perhaps the pharmacist has reconstituted the medication with the wrong transport medium, for example sodium chloride instead of water for injection.

       Administration: you need to be very clear which route a medication should be given through and that the dose has been calculated correctly.

       Monitoring: you need to check the administration and effect of a medicine on the patient. For example, a patient prescribed diclofenac sodium must be checked to see whether they are asthmatic. Patients with hypertension or heart failure must be monitored carefully if they are given diuretics. Blood pressure, fluid input and output, and sodium and potassium, etc. must be checked.

      Any one of these categories could be the weak link where a mistake can occur.

      The Department of Health reports that the wrong dose, strength, or frequency of a drug accounts for over a quarter of all medication incident reports.