Challenges implementing bar-coded medication administration in the emergency room in comparison to medical surgical units.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-1-2013

Institution/Department

Emergency Medicine, Nursing

Journal Title

Computers, informatics, nursing : CIN

MeSH Headings

Electronic Data Processing, Emergency Service, Hospital, Humans, Medication Errors, Medication Systems, Hospital, Surgery Department, Hospital

Abstract

Bar-coded medication administration has been successfully implemented and utilized to decrease medication errors at a number of hospitals in recent years. The purpose of this article was to discuss the varying success in utilization of bar-coded medication administration on medical-surgical units and in the emergency department. Utilization reports were analyzed to better understand the challenges between the units. Many factors negatively impacted utilization in the emergency department, including the inability to use bar-coded medication administration for verbal orders or to document medications distributed by the prescribing providers, unique aspects of emergency department nursing workflow, additional steps to chart when using bar-coded medication administration, and alert fatigue. Hardware problems affected all users. Bar-coded medication administration in its current form is more suitable for use on medical-surgical floors than in the emergency department. New solutions should be developed for bar-coded medication administration in the emergency department, keeping in mind requirements to chart medications when there is no order in the system, document medications distributed by prescribing providers, adapt to unpredictable nursing workflow, minimize steps to chart with bar-coded medication administration, limit alerts to those that are clinically meaningful, and choose reliable hardware with adequate bar-code scanning capability.

ISSN

1538-9774

First Page

133

Last Page

141

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