Examining the Impact of Nursing Structures and Processes on Medication Errors
This research brief determines the relationships among characteristics of the nursing practice environment, nurses’ error interception practices and non-intercepted medication errors in acute care hospitals.
Background
- Medication errors remain one of the leading threats to patient safety.
- More than 7,000 inpatients die each year due to medication errors.
- Medication errors can originate from a variety of providers including physicians during the prescribing stage, pharmacists during the dispensing stage, support staff during the transcription stage, and registered nurses during the administration stage.
- Research indicates registered nurses (RNs) can serve as a safety net, intercepting medication errors before they reach the patient, regardless of the source or stage of the error.
- Yet, little is known regarding factors and processes that facilitate this important work of nurses.
Key Findings
- A supportive nursing practice environment was positively associated with nurses error interception practices.
- Nurses’ error interception practices were inversely associated with non-intercepted medication errors per 1,000 patient days.
Charts
- Chart 1. Effects of Practice Environment on Nurses’ Error Interception Practices
- Chart 2. Effects of Practice Environment and Interception Practices on Non-Intercepted Medication Errors.
Attachments:
Charts 1 and 2
Examining_Impact_Nursing_Structures_Processes_Medication_Errors