Nurse perception on medication error in Intensive Care Unit

Introduction: Medication error is incorrect or wrongful administration of medication that can cause harm to patient safety. The role of healthcare provider especially nurses is important in preventing the medication error. Objectives: To assess the nurse perception on medication error. Methods/M...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mohamed Ariffin, Suzilawati, Ludin, Salizar, Ilias, Nurul Afida
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Medical Biomedical and Applied Sciences 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/73915/1/document%20%281%29
http://irep.iium.edu.my/73915/
http://jmbas.in/index.php/jmbas/article/view/194/157
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.iium.irep.73915
record_format dspace
spelling my.iium.irep.739152019-09-06T00:34:24Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/73915/ Nurse perception on medication error in Intensive Care Unit Mohamed Ariffin, Suzilawati Ludin, Salizar Ilias, Nurul Afida RT Nursing Introduction: Medication error is incorrect or wrongful administration of medication that can cause harm to patient safety. The role of healthcare provider especially nurses is important in preventing the medication error. Objectives: To assess the nurse perception on medication error. Methods/Materials: A cross-sectional study was conducted among 65 nurses who work in Intensive Care Unit. A set of questionnaires distributed and data obtained were analyzed using SPSS for descriptive and inferential analysis. Result: Most participated respondents are female (N=61, 93.8%). The nurses agree on the importance to report medication error even no harm has resulted to the patient (98.4%), nurse manager should keep track of a nurse’s medication errors (96.9%) and medication-dispensing technology reduces medication error (95.4%). Important factors that potentially contribute to medication error were unclear verbal order (86.2%), look-alike sound-alike drugs (84.6%), and insufficient training (73.8%). The perception of medication error and factor contributed to medication error has a weak and negatively relationship (-0.179) and not correlated (p=0.077). The significant association was seen between demographic characteristics and nurses’ perception on medication error. Only education level seen associated with perception on medication error (p=0.01). Conclusion: Emphasizing the nurse understanding may reduce the incidence of medication error in ICU. Journal of Medical Biomedical and Applied Sciences 2019 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/73915/1/document%20%281%29 Mohamed Ariffin, Suzilawati and Ludin, Salizar and Ilias, Nurul Afida (2019) Nurse perception on medication error in Intensive Care Unit. Journal of Medical Biomedical and Applied Sciences, 7 (7). pp. 267-271. E-ISSN 2349-0748 http://jmbas.in/index.php/jmbas/article/view/194/157 10.15520/jmbas.v7i7.194
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic RT Nursing
spellingShingle RT Nursing
Mohamed Ariffin, Suzilawati
Ludin, Salizar
Ilias, Nurul Afida
Nurse perception on medication error in Intensive Care Unit
description Introduction: Medication error is incorrect or wrongful administration of medication that can cause harm to patient safety. The role of healthcare provider especially nurses is important in preventing the medication error. Objectives: To assess the nurse perception on medication error. Methods/Materials: A cross-sectional study was conducted among 65 nurses who work in Intensive Care Unit. A set of questionnaires distributed and data obtained were analyzed using SPSS for descriptive and inferential analysis. Result: Most participated respondents are female (N=61, 93.8%). The nurses agree on the importance to report medication error even no harm has resulted to the patient (98.4%), nurse manager should keep track of a nurse’s medication errors (96.9%) and medication-dispensing technology reduces medication error (95.4%). Important factors that potentially contribute to medication error were unclear verbal order (86.2%), look-alike sound-alike drugs (84.6%), and insufficient training (73.8%). The perception of medication error and factor contributed to medication error has a weak and negatively relationship (-0.179) and not correlated (p=0.077). The significant association was seen between demographic characteristics and nurses’ perception on medication error. Only education level seen associated with perception on medication error (p=0.01). Conclusion: Emphasizing the nurse understanding may reduce the incidence of medication error in ICU.
format Article
author Mohamed Ariffin, Suzilawati
Ludin, Salizar
Ilias, Nurul Afida
author_facet Mohamed Ariffin, Suzilawati
Ludin, Salizar
Ilias, Nurul Afida
author_sort Mohamed Ariffin, Suzilawati
title Nurse perception on medication error in Intensive Care Unit
title_short Nurse perception on medication error in Intensive Care Unit
title_full Nurse perception on medication error in Intensive Care Unit
title_fullStr Nurse perception on medication error in Intensive Care Unit
title_full_unstemmed Nurse perception on medication error in Intensive Care Unit
title_sort nurse perception on medication error in intensive care unit
publisher Journal of Medical Biomedical and Applied Sciences
publishDate 2019
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/73915/1/document%20%281%29
http://irep.iium.edu.my/73915/
http://jmbas.in/index.php/jmbas/article/view/194/157
_version_ 1646012461792362496
score 13.209306