Factors Affecting Medication Errors from the Perspective of Nursing Staff
Journal Title: Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research - Year 2018, Vol 12, Issue 3
Abstract
ABSTRACT Introduction: Medication administration is a key responsibility of nurses. If this duty is not properly accomplished, it can cause serious threats to the health and safety of patients. Aim: To explore factors affecting the frequency of medication errors from the perspective of nurses in educational hospitals of Ilam, Iran. Materials and Methods: The present descriptive analytical study was conducted on 120 nurses randomly selected from teaching hospitals of Ilam. A two part standard questionnaire was used. Its first part was on the participants demographic information. The second part consisted of three domains including 11 questions on the factors associated with nursing, seven questions on the factors associated with wards, and four questions on the factors associated with nursing management. Data analysis was performed using the SPSS software, version 19.0. The significant p-value was considered less than 0.05. A total of 120 completely filled questionnaires were obtained and this formed the study data. Results: The participants included 50 (42%) males and 70 (58%) females. In all the three domains, the most frequent factors resulting in the incidence of medication errors included: occupational fatigue exhaustion (58.5%), nurses personal neglect (56%), heavy workload in wards (65.6%), and inadequate staffing and high nurse/patient ratios (69.7%), respectively. Conclusion: Fatigue, personal carelessness, heavy workload, inadequate staffing and high nurse/patient ratios are the important and effective factors causing medication errors. Reducing the number of nurse's shifts during the month and increasing the number of personnel per shift are recommended.
Authors and Affiliations
Masoumeh Shohani, Hamed Tavan
The Relationship between Anxiety and Coping Strategies in Family Caregivers of Patients with Trauma
Introduction: Traumatic events are of high incidence and affect not only the patient but also their family members, causing psychological problems such as stress and anxiety for caregivers of these patients. Therefore, t...
Prevalence of Inborn Errors of Metabolism in Neonates
ABSTRACT Introduction: Among the most advanced public health promotion and disease prevention programs, the newborn screening is of paramount importance, seeking timely detection, diagnosis and treatment of genetic disor...
Syphilis Screening in Pre-procedural Patients at a Tertiary Cardiac Care Centre in India
ABSTRACT Introduction: Routine pre-procedural screening for blood-borne infections is a common practice despite lack of standard guidelines. The incidence of syphilis has shown an upward trend in recent years. Aim: To de...
Morphologic Spectrum of Duodenal Biopsies in Malabsorption: A Study from Southern India
Introduction: Duodenal endoscopic biopsy is a common investigation for various non-neoplastic conditions. Malabsorption is a common indication for duodenal biopsy in our setting. Aim: Our study was undertaken to study th...
Imaging in a Case of Extensive Paediatric Mediastinal Lymphoma Presenting as Haemothorax
ABSTRACT Lymphomas are the third most common paediatric malignancies and the most common paediatric mediastinal masses. On imaging they present as large, lobulated, homogenous, predominantly anterior mediastinal masses w...