• J Nurs Manag · Apr 2014

    Nurses' experiences and perspectives on medication safety practices: an explorative qualitative study.

    • Marian Smeulers, Astrid T Onderwater, Myra C B van Zwieten, and Hester Vermeulen.
    • Department of Quality and Process Innovation (KPI), Academic Medical Centre, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
    • J Nurs Manag. 2014 Apr 1; 22 (3): 276-85.

    AimTo explore nurses' experiences with and perspectives on preventing medication administration errors.BackgroundInsight into nurses' experiences with and perspectives on preventing medication administration errors is important and can be utilised to tailor and implement safety practices.MethodsA qualitative interview study of 20 nurses in an academic medical centre was conducted between March and December of 2011.ResultsThree themes emerged from this study: (1) nurses' roles and responsibilities in medication safety: aside from safe preparation and administration, the clinical reasoning of nurses is essential for medication safety; (2) nurses' ability to work safely: knowledge of risks and nurses' work circumstances influence their ability to work safely; and (3) nurses' acceptance of safety practices: advantages, feasibility and appropriateness are important incentives for acceptance of a safety practice.ConclusionsNurses' experiences coincide with the assumption that they are in a pre-eminent position to enable safe medication management; however, their ability to adequately perform this role depends on sufficient knowledge to assess the risks of medication administration and on the circumstances in which they work.Implications For Nursing ManagementSafe medication management requires a learning climate and professional practice environment that enables further development of professional nursing skills and knowledge.© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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