Five Rights of Medication Safety

Avoid Serious Errors by Observing These Tips

© Kathy Quan

Prescription medications, morguefile.com

There are Five Rights to Medication Safety. Some facilities and medical texts indicate a few more, but these five are common to all versions.

There are 5 basic Rights to Medication Safety. Nurses and other healthcare professionals are expected to adhere to these rules to avoid medication errors and ensure medication safety in hospitals, skilled nursing facilities, clinics and practitioner's offices.

These are rules that nurses need to teach to patients as well. Patients should learn to adhere to the 5 Rights of Medication Safety. How many times has there been a horror story (or near miss) about how Mary Jones accidentally took her husband Mike's medication by mistake? Some pharmacies are now color coding medication bottles for their clients to help avoid such errors. Even the best efforts are not always fool proof. Following the 5 Rights of Medication Safety, this type of scenario can be avoided.

Right Medication:

Right Dose:

Right Time:

Right Route:

Right Patient:

Medication errors are all too often the result of carelessness. Taking and giving medications is an act that needs to be done carefully and taken quite seriously. All efforts need to be made to avoid errors. If patients or caregivers have questions they should contact the nurse, practitioner or pharmacist.

Each time a new medication is ordered, the patient and caregiver should review this information with the prescribing practitioner or office nurse. The pharmacist should also review it with them when the prescription is dispensed. If family members or other caregivers are involved in the administration or dispensing of medications they need to understand these steps in order to avoid medication errors.

Medications can be pre-dispensed in a variety of medication boxes with days of the week, as well as times of the day written on them. These help to ensure patients take the appropriate medications at the right times. They also make it obvious if a dose has been missed. Medication boxes should be set up carefully and monitored for compliance.


The copyright of the article Five Rights of Medication Safety in Public Healthcare Issues is owned by Kathy Quan . Permission to republish Five Rights of Medication Safety must be granted by the author in writing.


Prescription medications, morguefile.com
       

Comments
Dec 14, 2007 11:25 PM
redback :
Hi Kathy.

The article is interesting and if intended for use by patient and carer, my 2-bobs worth:

For your own health's sake, the practitioner has a right to know all other medications...legal and otherwise...you're on. Re-phrased, it's a patient responsibility. The practitioner has a responsibility to advise the patient if the medication is for a problem different to what the medication is usually prescribed for. Re-phrased, the patient has a right to know the purpose of any medication. The patient has a right to 'informed consent' and to seek a review of their medication on their own initiative.

Generic? Here, this is cheaper so I guess we have a right to the better version or the cheaper version OR an explanation why it is NOT appropriate for us eg some ingedients may counteract other medications.

Right dose? Here, the pharmacist can download a 'Consumer Medicine Information' sheet to know what is the <b>maximum</b> dosage recommended. Anything ABOVE that may be wrong. I guess we have a right to the right dose but a greater right to the right treatment.

<b>"Should it before a meal, with a meal, after a meal, or with a snack?"</b>

I'd add: With any liquid or with a full glass of water?
Dec 15, 2007 12:31 PM
Kathy Quan :
Redback,
Yes, I agree with your points and have discussed many of them in other articles. Patients always need to inform ALL of their practitioners of all medications they take including OTC meds and herbs.

By using one pharmacy, the pharmacist also knows what prescription meds a person is taking and to check for issues.

There are many other rights to medication safety that have been added along the way so to speak, but these 5 basic rights are designed to make nurses, other health care professionals, patients and caregivers stop and think and BE SAFE when administering medications. If they observe these 5 basic rights, other considerations for the individual situation should come to light as well.

Unfortunately, this process is not always followed and errors happen. For instance...even in the middle of the night if you get up to take an aspirin, make sure you have the aspirin bottle....turn on a light and double check!

Be SAFE and well.
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