Table 1.
Examples of medication errors reported according to lex Maria and/or HSAN
ID no | Report | Drug | Where | What happened/discovered/consequences |
---|---|---|---|---|
#6 | lex Maria | Cisplatin should have been cyclophosphamide | University hospital | Patient received another patient's drug, 30 mg of cisplatin instead of cyclophosphamide. Nurse discovered during further preparation and informed the doctor. The patient had to stay at hospital for 1 night. The treatment was delayed for 1 week. No permanent harm. |
#16 | lex Maria | Doxorubicin | Pharmacy | Pump run at too high a speed used during preparation; homepump delivered drug during 1 instead of 48 h. Discovered by patient/nurse when the infusion was so quick. Extra treatment prescribed. Probably no harm. |
#18 | lex Maria | Vincristine | University hospital | Dose that was 10 times higher than prescribed. A dose of 2.0 mg became 20 mg when prepared by a nurse. Discovered the same afternoon during nursing rounds; her colleagues reacted. Serious neurological harm; treated in respirator for a period. The patient died after 7 months. |
HSAN | ||||
#19 | lex Maria | Cisplatin | Pharmacy | Double dose prepared. Prescription ‘Cisplatin 0.5 mg, 190 mg, 380 mL to be diluted in 2 × 1000 mL NaCl 9 mg/mL’ was interpreted as a dose of 380 mg. The first pharmacist pondered the dose in the evening, contacted the hospital and the error was discovered. Patient became deaf. |
HSAN | ||||
#40 | HSAN | Etoposide | University hospital | Total dose for the course became dose per day, 330 mg, 3 times per day for 3 days, should have been 110 mg, 3 times per day for 3 days. Nurse suspected that the dose was too high and treatment was not given on day 3. Patient suffered from anaemia and was hospitalised for two weeks. |
#53 | lex Maria | Carboplatin | County hospital | Prescription for 5 days should have been only for 1 day. Due to hearing disturbances from cisplatin, there was a switch to carboplatin. Dose 800 mg per day. Discovered when the patient came back with adverse reactions, hospitalised for a week. Probably no long-term harm. |