| Literature DB >> 28429973 |
Albert Farre1, Gemma Heath2, Karen Shaw1, Teresa Jordan3, Carole Cummins4.
Abstract
Objectives To explore paediatric nurses' experiences and perspectives of their role in the medication process and how this role is enacted in everyday practice. Methods A qualitative case study on a general surgical ward of a paediatric hospital in England, one year prior to the planned implementation of ePrescribing. Three focus groups and six individual semi-structured interviews were conducted, involving 24 nurses. Focus groups and interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, anonymized and subjected to thematic analysis. Results Two overarching analytical themes were identified: the centrality of risk management in nurses' role in the medication process and the distributed nature of nurses' medication risk management practices. Nurses' contribution to medication safety was seen as an intrinsic feature of a role that extended beyond just preparing and administering medications as prescribed and placed nurses at the heart of a dynamic set of interactions, practices and situations through which medication risks were managed. These findings also illustrate the collective nature of patient safety. Conclusions Both the recognized and the unrecognized contributions of nurses to the management of medications needs to be considered in the design and implementation of ePrescribing systems.Entities:
Keywords: nurses; paediatrics; patient safety; qualitative research; risk management
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28429973 DOI: 10.1177/1355819616686995
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Health Serv Res Policy ISSN: 1355-8196