| |
MNA Position
Statement on Medication Errors
Statement of
the Problem
The Institute of
Medicine (IOM, 1999) aptly titled their report, “To Err Is Human,” as the enormity
of the medical error problem was revealed to the nation. Human beings, even
the most diligent, make errors. The traditional response of punitive action
with its focus on an individual committing an error has been ineffective. Systems
must be designed to lessen the opportunity for errors to occur and make it easier
for people to do the right thing.
Nurses are educated
with the mantra of the five rights of medication administration the right patient,
the right drug, the right dose, the right route, and the right time. However,
the act of administering a medication is only one action in a long series of
multidisciplinary tasks predetermined by the institution in which they occur.
Because this process has multiple steps and hand-offs, a systems design must
be implemented to ensure patient safety. A nurse, however, cannot be absolved
of negligence in the administration of medications and is accountable for the
regulations set forth by the Massachusetts Board of Registration in Nursing.
PREVALENCE OF
MEDICATION ERRORS
Results from studies
in Colorado and Utah indicate medical errors cause death to at least 44,000
Americans each year. (IOM 1999) Another study reported in 1991 in New
York State suggests the total (medical deaths) may be as high as 98,000 deaths
nationally with medication errors accounting for up to 14,000 deaths annually.(IOM
99). Mason (1999) cites a 1993 study published in the Quality Review Bulletin
stating that approximately one million medication errors occur annually with
about 120,000 resulting in death. Bates et al (1995) (1997) in their Adverse
Drug Event Prevention Study determined the overall rate of adverse drug events
(ADE) was 6.5 per 100 hospital admissions with 28% deemed preventable. Leape
et al (1995) revealed that in an additional 5.5% of patients, potential ADE’s
were averted by chance or interception of an error.
Lazarou,
Pomeranz, & Corey (1998) focused on two separate populations in their study.
Included were those admitted to the hospital due to an adverse drug reaction
(ADR) and those experiencing an ADR while hospitalized. They estimated that
106,000 hospital patients died in 1994 due to an Adverse Drug Event. This category
includes error in all steps of a medication system. In addition to the human
costs, research indicates that ADRs result in an additional 1.56 to 4 billion
dollars in direct hospital costs per year in the United States. Even more alarming
is the conclusion that ADR’s may rank as the fourth to sixth leading cause of
death. (IOM 99)
These statistics
are demoralizing for health care professionals who set a standard of 100% accuracy
as their goal. Mason (1999) states that our institutions are committed to systems
that expect human error not human perfection and fail in their organizational
accountability to develop systems that reflect practice standards. William Richardson,
chair of the committee that wrote “To Err is Human” stated in the press release
(IOM, 11/29/99, on-line), “We must have a health system that makes it easy to
do things right and hard to do them wrong.”
In 1997,
in response to the alarming number of sentinel events occurring in the State
of Massachusetts, the Department of Public Health hosted a gathering of all
stakeholders in health care. The Massachusetts Coalition for the Prevention
of Medical Errors (1997) was formed and included the professional organizations
for medicine, pharmacy, and nursing; the hospital association; all pertinent
regulatory licensing boards; insurers; governmental accrediting agencies and
selected hospitals. The group’s initial objective was to develop a set of principles
and best practice recommendations for health care institutions with varied resources,
capabilities, and needs.
In 1998,
the Coalition issued their first initiative, Best Practice Recommendations to
Reduce Medication Errors, based on the Massachusetts Hospital Association medication
error prevention project. The document addressed two recommendations, (1) adopt
a systems-oriented approach to medication error reduction, and (2) promote a
non-punitive atmosphere for reporting of errors which values the sharing of
information about the causes of errors and strategies for prevention. Through
consensus building groups and practice experts, best practices have been developed
to address short-term recommendations for medication administration processes
and procedures.( Mass Coalition) Long-term recommendations target computerization
of order entry, computerized pharmacy checks and balances, computer-generated
medication administration records, and bar coding of medications.
Best practice
guidelines, published in 1999, addressed wrong-route errors specific to actual
incidences that occurred within the Commonwealth. In January 2000, best practices
for improved prescription order writing were approved by the Coalition. All
best practice recommendations provide suggestions related to the avoidance of
errors. Buerhaus (1999), in a published interview with Lucian Leape of the Harvard
School of Public Health addressed the causes and prevention of errors and concludes
with the premise that to prevent errors you redesign the system, not the people.
ASSOCIATION
POSITION
The Massachusetts
Nurses Association/Congress of Nursing Practice, is deeply committed to
furthering awareness within the nursing community of the implications of medication
errors for society as a whole and for the individual’s licensure and nursing
practice.
The Massachusetts
Nurses Association/Congress of Nursing Practice believes that education is empowerment.
Empowerment enables the nursing community to guide their institutions in the
creation of safer systems for medication administration through active participation
in the development of medication specific policies and procedures.
The Massachusetts
Nurses Association/Congress of Nursing Practice acknowledges that there are
contributing factors in the health care workplace that have significant implications
for the occurrence of medication errors among nursing professionals. The factors
are identified as follows: insufficient nurse staffing, “floating” to an unfamiliar
unit, lack of proper orientation to a process or area (competency training),
mandatory overtime beyond regularly scheduled work hours, and the procurement
of temporary nurses unfamiliar with the institution. For these reasons,
the Massachusetts Nurses Association recommends legislation assuring safe staffing
and prohibiting mandatory overtime as well as education of all nurses on whistle
blower protection which defends the right of nurses to speak out against unsafe
systems of care. In support of nurses’ rights, the Congress recommends
that all institutions adopt voluntary non-punitive reporting systems.
Further,
The Massachusetts Nurses Association/Congress of Nursing Practice recommends
that all nurses:
- Support the
current recommendations of the Massachusetts Coalition for the Prevention
of Medical Errors and the approved Best Practice Guidelines.
- Practice the
Six Rights for Nurses. (Colleran-Cook, 1999)
• Support establishment of a non-punitive environment in the work
place that restricts punitive approaches to those committing error
• Support the
development of a team approach ( nurse- pharmacist-physician committees)
to reduce error.
• The Massachusetts
Nurses Association/Congress of Nursing Practice recommend that
all health care insti- tutions:
• Require clear,
legible, and complete medication order writing or printing from
all practitioners licensed to prescribe.
• Require distribution
of educational materials for all new medications approved by the
institution to team members
• Encourage nursing
participation on Pharmacy/Therapeutics and Nursing/Pharmacy
Committees.
• Use root cause-analysis
when investigating medication errors.
• Adopt a non-punitive
environment within their facility.
• Abandon the
culture of blame.
• Adhere to and
implement the recommendations and best practices of the Coalition
for the Prevention of Medical Errors.
- Honor nurses
conscientious efforts to protect their professional licenses.
The Massachusetts
Nurses Association/Congress of Nursing Practice supports and encourages:
• Research
that investigates approaches to safe and improved medication administration
systems.
• The continuation
of the activities of the Massachusetts Coalition for the Prevention
of Medical Errors in spearheading patient safety advances.
• The establishment
of a national mandatory reporting center for medical errors.
• The advancement
of consumer strategies that empow- er the role of the public to reduce
safety concerns asso- ciated with hospital admissions.(Smith, 1998)
The advancement of
strategies that enhance the role of patients and families in protecting safe patient
care.
RATIONALE
The problems discussed,
herein, have become a national mark on the countenance of the most prosperous,
medically advanced nation in the free world. The frequency of medication errors
and the implications for both patient and practitioner are staggering.
As stated above in a quote from Lucian Leape’s interview, we must redesign the
system and not the people. As Massachusetts has led the nation in remorse for
its medication errors may it now lead the nation in reform of a flawed system.
This position statement
was developed in conjunction with the Congress of Nursing Practice, MNA and
a Clinical Practicum for Saint Joseph College, Standish ME, Master of Science
in Nursing Program. It has utilized the Massachusetts Coalition for the Prevention
of Medical Errors established recommendations for health care in the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts and beyond.
References
Bates, D. W., Cullen,
D. J., Laird, N., Petersen, L. A., Small, S. D., Servi, D., Laffel, G., Sweitzer,
B. J., Shea, B. F., Hallisey, R. Vander Vliet, M., Nemeskal, R., & Leape,
L. L. (1995). Incidence of adverse drug events and potential adverse drug events.
JAMA, Vol 274, No. 1, 29-34.
Bates, D.
W., Spell, N., Cullen, D. J., Burdick, E., Laird, N., Petersen, L. A., Small,
S. D., Sweitzer, B. J., & Leape, L. L. (1997). The costs of adverse drug
events in hospitalized patients. JAMA, Vol 277, No. 4, 307-311.
Buerhaus,
P. I. (1999). Lucian Leape on the causes and prevention of errors and adverse
events in health care. Image: Journal of Nursing Scholarship, Vol. 31, No. 3,
281-286.
Colleran-Cook,
M. (1999). Six rights for nurses
administering medications. Massachusetts Nurse. June 1999.
Institute
of Medicine, (1999) Preventing death and injury from medical errors requires
dramatic, system-wide changes. (On-line: 11/29/1999) http://www4.nationalacademies.org/news.nsf/isbn
Institute
of Medicine, (1999). To err is human: building a safer health system. Washington,
D.C. National Academy Press. Executive summary (on-line) http://www4.nas.org
Lazarou,
J., Pomeranz, B. H., & Corey, P. N. (1998). Incidence of adverse drug reactions
in hospitalized patients. JAMA, Vol 279, No. 15, 1200-1205.
Leape, L.
L., Bates, D. W., Cullen, D. J., Cooper, J., Demonaco, H. J., Gallivan, T.,
Hallisey, R., Ives, J., Laird, N., Laffel, G., Nemeskal, R., Petersen, L.A.,
Porter, K., Servi, D., Shea, B, F., Small, S. D., Sweitzer, B. J., Thompson,
B. T., & Vander Vliet, M. (1996). JAMA, Vol 274, No. 1, 35-43.
Mason, D.
J. (1999). On human perfection. AJN, Vol 99, No. 3, 7.
Massachusetts
Coalition for the Prevention of Medical Errors (1997). MHA best practice recommendations
to reduce medication errors: executive summary. (On-line) http://mhalink.org
Massachusetts
Coalition for the Prevention of Medical Errors (2000). Safety first: improving
prescription order writing. (On-line) http://mhalink.org
Smith, D.
(1998). Medical error and patient injury: costly and often preventable. Public
Policy Institute American Association of Retired Persons. September, 1998.
Back
to Position Statements
|
|