Source
Division of Anaesthesia, University of Cambridge, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, UK. dww21@cam.ac.uk
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To quantify the variability in the concentration of drug infusions prepared on an intensive care unit and establish whether there was a relationship between the quality of syringe labeling and drug preparation.
DESIGN:
Audit carried out over 3 weeks in May 2006 and completed in May 2007.
SETTING:
The adult neurosciences critical care unit of a UK university teaching hospital.
INTERVENTIONS:
Daily collections of discarded syringes containing midazolam, insulin, norepinephrine, dopamine, potassium or magnesium.
MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS:
Residual solutions in the syringes were sampled and the concentrations measured. Syringe labels were inspected and awarded a score for labeling quality based on an 11-point scale. A total of 149 syringes were analyzed. Six of the magnesium syringes contained 4-5 times too much Mg(2+), presumably because of confusion about converting millimoles to grams. The majority of the other infusions differed from the expected concentration by more than 10%. Magnesium infusions were least likely to be properly labeled (p= 0.012), and there was a positive correlation between quality of syringe labeling and drug preparation (p=0.002). After the introduction of a new electrolyte prescription chart, magnesium and potassium preparation significantly improved but there was still substantial variability.
CONCLUSIONS:
These findings present a strong argument for the use of pre-prepared syringes or standardized drug preparation and labeling systems. They also highlight once again the difficulties healthcare professionals encounter when dealing with different ways of expressing drug concentrations.