¶ … liability that a nurse encounters on the job. It provides a discussion about the legal risks involved in various health care settings for nurses. There were eight sources used to complete this paper.
For years, there have been reports of a nationwide shortage of nurses. Hospitals, medical offices and nursing homes are constantly trying to attract nurses with better hours, better benefits and sign on bonuses, but the media continues to report a shortage of nurses in almost all areas. One of the reasons for the shortage may be nurses leaving the profession for various reasons including the liability that working as a nurse creates.
Nurses have many different duties regardless of the environment that they work in. They may be required to assess patients, take vital statistics, advise the physicians on the findings, handle patient phone calls and administer medications. Many of the duties that they perform carry a risk of liability to them (Ashby, 1997). There are several reasons that these duties increase the legal liability of the nurse. If a patient is treated by a nurse and that patient suffers illness, injury or death that can be related back to the treatment given by the nurse, the nurse may indeed be held liable. In addition to the possibility of nursing errors, there is a liability by the very virtue of the job itself.
Medication administration is one of the most time-consuming aspects of nursing practice (Ashby, 1997). Expertise in medication calculation and administration is essential to the treatment of all patients; however, many nurses experience difficulty when calculating medications. In this study, 56.4% of nurses could not calculate medications correctly in 90% of the problems, suggesting the need for regular self-testing of medication calculation skills. Continuing education programs implemented for identified medication calculation errors influences nursing practice and patient care outcomes (Ashby, 1997). "
The administration of medications creates a legal liability for the nurses who fill them and the nurses who give them.
Each time a nurse has to measure or administer medication to a patient he or she produces a legal liability. If the nurse mixes the medication incorrectly or administers it to the wrong patient there is legal liability. In addition to mistakes made directly by the nurse there are legal liabilities of the nurse that can be caused by other personnel. One of those with regards to medication is if the doctor orders the wrong medication. If this happens, the nurse may find himself or herself named in a lawsuit with an allegation that the nurse should have realized that the wrong medication had been ordered.
A second liability that the nurse may encounter is that the patient may have a bad reaction to the medications and blame the nurse. People have many sensitivities to medications and it is possible for a nurse to administer a medication that harms the patient. It doesn't mean the nurse was negligent, if the patient did not inform the nurse or the registrar of sensitivities. If the nurse follows orders and administers the ordered medication in a correct manner but the patient becomes ill or dies the nurse may be accused of negligence. When a patient is injured or dies there are many emotions involved. The family members are shocked and they have a desire to find fault with someone tangible. Each time a nurse administers medication he or she is exposing himself to legal liability.
There are many instances that can place a nurse under a legal liability risk.
In a recent study regarding medication issues in surgical nursing 100 surgical nurses were assessed to see what their rate of error when it comes to medication administration was.
A sample of 100 practicing medical-surgical nurses from a 380 bed hospital in the Midwest were approached to participate in the study. Over a 6-week period, 62 (62%) of these nurses consented to participate in the study and became study subjects. All subjects signed a consent form to participate in the study (Ashby, 1997)."
The primary question posed in this study was: How many practicing medical-surgical nurses lacked the skills necessary to calculate medications correctly in 90% of the problems? Test scores on the Bayne-Bindler Medication Calculation Test ranged from 45% to 100%. The median score on the test was 85% and the mean was 82%. Twenty-seven (43.5%) of the nurses attained a score of 90% or more on the medication calculation test. Thirty-five (56.4%) of the nurses lacked the skills necessary to calculate medications correctly in 90% of the problems (Ashby, 1997). "
The study concluded that surgical nurses make more errors in IV medications than in other types and that they make...
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