Medication Error Reporting Rate and its Barriers and Facilitators among Nurses

Introduction: Medication errors are among the most prevalent medical errors leading to morbidity and mortality. Effective prevention of this type of errors depends on the presence of a well-organized reporting system. The purpose of this study was to explore medication error reporting rate and its b...

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Main Authors: Snor Bayazidi, Yadolah Zarezadeh, Vahid Zamanzadeh, Kobra Parvan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tabriz University of Medical Sciences 2012-11-01
Series:Journal of Caring Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.tbzmed.ac.ir/PDF/JCS/Manuscript/JCS-1-231.pdf
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spelling doaj-adadf67f2342464994ed4ca4a41cc2402020-11-25T01:06:42ZengTabriz University of Medical SciencesJournal of Caring Sciences2251-99202012-11-011423123610.56.81/jcs.2012.32Medication Error Reporting Rate and its Barriers and Facilitators among NursesSnor BayazidiYadolah ZarezadehVahid ZamanzadehKobra ParvanIntroduction: Medication errors are among the most prevalent medical errors leading to morbidity and mortality. Effective prevention of this type of errors depends on the presence of a well-organized reporting system. The purpose of this study was to explore medication error reporting rate and its barriers and facilitators among nurses in teaching hospitals of Urmia University of Medical Sciences (Iran).Methods: In a descriptive study in 2011, 733 nurses working in Urmia teaching hospitals were included. Data was collected using a questionnaire based on Haddon matrix. The questionnaire consisted of three items about medication error reporting rate, eight items on barriers of reporting, and seven items on facilitators of reporting. The collected data was analyzed by descriptive statistics in SPSS14.Results:The rate of reporting medication errors among nurses was far less than medication errors they had made. Nurses perceived that the most important barriers of reporting medication errors were blaming individuals instead of the system, consequences of reporting errors, and fear of reprimand and punishment. Some facilitating factors were also determined. Conclusion: Overall, the rate of medication errors was found to be much more than what had been reported by nurses. Therefore, it is suggested to train nurses and hospital administrators on facilitators and barriers of error reporting in order to enhance patient safety. http://journals.tbzmed.ac.ir/PDF/JCS/Manuscript/JCS-1-231.pdfMedication errorsReportingHospitalPatient safetyNurses
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Snor Bayazidi
Yadolah Zarezadeh
Vahid Zamanzadeh
Kobra Parvan
spellingShingle Snor Bayazidi
Yadolah Zarezadeh
Vahid Zamanzadeh
Kobra Parvan
Medication Error Reporting Rate and its Barriers and Facilitators among Nurses
Journal of Caring Sciences
Medication errors
Reporting
Hospital
Patient safety
Nurses
author_facet Snor Bayazidi
Yadolah Zarezadeh
Vahid Zamanzadeh
Kobra Parvan
author_sort Snor Bayazidi
title Medication Error Reporting Rate and its Barriers and Facilitators among Nurses
title_short Medication Error Reporting Rate and its Barriers and Facilitators among Nurses
title_full Medication Error Reporting Rate and its Barriers and Facilitators among Nurses
title_fullStr Medication Error Reporting Rate and its Barriers and Facilitators among Nurses
title_full_unstemmed Medication Error Reporting Rate and its Barriers and Facilitators among Nurses
title_sort medication error reporting rate and its barriers and facilitators among nurses
publisher Tabriz University of Medical Sciences
series Journal of Caring Sciences
issn 2251-9920
publishDate 2012-11-01
description Introduction: Medication errors are among the most prevalent medical errors leading to morbidity and mortality. Effective prevention of this type of errors depends on the presence of a well-organized reporting system. The purpose of this study was to explore medication error reporting rate and its barriers and facilitators among nurses in teaching hospitals of Urmia University of Medical Sciences (Iran).Methods: In a descriptive study in 2011, 733 nurses working in Urmia teaching hospitals were included. Data was collected using a questionnaire based on Haddon matrix. The questionnaire consisted of three items about medication error reporting rate, eight items on barriers of reporting, and seven items on facilitators of reporting. The collected data was analyzed by descriptive statistics in SPSS14.Results:The rate of reporting medication errors among nurses was far less than medication errors they had made. Nurses perceived that the most important barriers of reporting medication errors were blaming individuals instead of the system, consequences of reporting errors, and fear of reprimand and punishment. Some facilitating factors were also determined. Conclusion: Overall, the rate of medication errors was found to be much more than what had been reported by nurses. Therefore, it is suggested to train nurses and hospital administrators on facilitators and barriers of error reporting in order to enhance patient safety.
topic Medication errors
Reporting
Hospital
Patient safety
Nurses
url http://journals.tbzmed.ac.ir/PDF/JCS/Manuscript/JCS-1-231.pdf
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