TY - JOUR
T1 - Factors influencing bar-code verification by nurses during medication administration in a Dutch hospital
AU - Van Onzenoort, Hein A.
AU - Van De Plas, Afke
AU - Kessels, Alfons G.
AU - Veldhorst-Janssen, Nicole M.
AU - Van Der Kuy, Paul Hugo M.
AU - Neef, Cees
PY - 2008/4/1
Y1 - 2008/4/1
N2 - Purpose. Factors influencing the bar-code verification by nurses during medication administration in a Dutch hospital were studied. Summary. The use of bar-code verification during medication administration in five medical departments was recorded daily for three weeks. These data were collected via electronic medication administration records. The frequency of bar-code verification was calculated as a percentage of all administrations, corrected for the availability of bar-coded packages. Nurses were asked why bar-code verification was not always used. A total of 23,492 medication administrations were recorded, 15,162 (64.5%) of which required bar-code verification. Bar-code verification was significantly influenced by the medical department, deviation between prescribed and administered times, administration route of the drug, number of nurses available in each department, and age of the nurse. The five most cited reasons for not verifying bar codes were difficulties in scanning bar codes on the medication labels, lack of awareness of bar codes on medication labels, delays in responses from the computerized system, shortage of time, and administration of medication before prescription. Conclusion. Nurses verified the bar codes of only about half of medications administered to patients. Various factors influenced the frequency of bar-code verification by nurses except the number of medications administered. More education regarding medication safety is warranted to increase compliance to a bar-code-enabled point-of-care system.
AB - Purpose. Factors influencing the bar-code verification by nurses during medication administration in a Dutch hospital were studied. Summary. The use of bar-code verification during medication administration in five medical departments was recorded daily for three weeks. These data were collected via electronic medication administration records. The frequency of bar-code verification was calculated as a percentage of all administrations, corrected for the availability of bar-coded packages. Nurses were asked why bar-code verification was not always used. A total of 23,492 medication administrations were recorded, 15,162 (64.5%) of which required bar-code verification. Bar-code verification was significantly influenced by the medical department, deviation between prescribed and administered times, administration route of the drug, number of nurses available in each department, and age of the nurse. The five most cited reasons for not verifying bar codes were difficulties in scanning bar codes on the medication labels, lack of awareness of bar codes on medication labels, delays in responses from the computerized system, shortage of time, and administration of medication before prescription. Conclusion. Nurses verified the bar codes of only about half of medications administered to patients. Various factors influenced the frequency of bar-code verification by nurses except the number of medications administered. More education regarding medication safety is warranted to increase compliance to a bar-code-enabled point-of-care system.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=41749102170&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2146/ajhp070368
DO - 10.2146/ajhp070368
M3 - Article
C2 - 18359973
AN - SCOPUS:41749102170
SN - 1079-2082
VL - 65
SP - 644
EP - 648
JO - American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy
JF - American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy
IS - 7
ER -