Medication Administration:
Always remember your 3 checks & 8 rightsRight:
1. Patient
2. Medication
3. Time
4. Dose
5. Route
6. Expiration
7. to Decline
8. DocumentationChecking:
1. Patient
2. Strength and dosage
3. Frequency
... against the med orderMedication checks done by a second nurse are always "independent."
Always check your medication the same way each time, and have a routine for you.
Example, follow the medication chart:
Stop, breathe, check:
☞ patient, dug, allergies
☞ route, dose, time.
☞ dr signed, allergies, IV stickers, etc.Check first, the medication and the patient on the first line, as well as their allergies.
Then move to the next line, route, dose, and time.
Then ensure the doctor's signature is there.
Then check the medication's expiry and correct preparation.
Do not:
☞ Ask a checker, 'can you please check my (insert medication, ie., heparin)?'
Instead, ask, 'can you pease check my medication,' to avoid influencing them in any way.Do not leave medications laying around.
Do not do more than one patient's medications at once.
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The Nurse/Midwife's Handbook - A Dictionary
Non-FictionTerms and abbreviations, dictionary style, as well as go-to clinical content. Everything be alphabetical here. Just a compilation of understandable information all in the same place for easy access. Comment for any requests to be added. I am also...