Litcius/Paper detail

COMPLIANCE TO SAFETY BARRIERS IN THE MEDICATION ADMINISTRATION PROCESS IN PEDIATRICS

J. de Oliveira, Bruna Luiza Diniz Padula, Mery Natali Silva Abreu, Allana dos Reis Corrêa, Patrícia Kuerten Rocha, Bruna Figueiredo Manzo

2020Texto & Contexto - Enfermagem25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT Objective: to investigate the compliance to safety barriers adopted in the preparation and administration of intravenous drugs in Pediatric and Pediatric Intensive Care Units. Method: exploratory, observational descriptive study, conducted with the nursing team of a pediatric intensive care unit and a pediatric clinic of a large public hospital in Belo Horizonte, from August to November 2017. Results: the sample consisted of 334 opportunities to observe the preparation and administration of medications in pediatric patients. Most of the actions were performed by female professionals, nursing technicians and civil servants. The professionals did not perform all the necessary safety barriers in any of the procedures. The hygiene of the preparation site, disinfection of the ampoule, connection, conference of the drug/dose/route administered with the prescription and double checking of the drugs were those that had the lowest compliance. Conclusion: the study highlights the fragility regarding compliance to safety barriers in the preparation and administration of medicines, resulting in a risk to the safety of hospitalized children. Continued education based on good practice is believed to be an important strategy for security.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePatient safetyMedical prescriptionObservational studyCompliance (psychology)NursingPediatric nursingAdministration (probate law)Family medicineMedical emergencyHealth carePsychologyEconomicsSocial psychologyLawEconomic growthPathologyPolitical sciencePatient Safety and Medication ErrorsPharmaceutical studies and practicesSafe Handling of Antineoplastic Drugs