Title of article :
Evaluation of nursesʹ knowledge and understanding of obstacles encountered when administering resuscitation medications
Author/Authors :
Chen، نويسنده , , Mei-Jung and Yu، نويسنده , , Shu and Chen، نويسنده , , I-Ju and Wang، نويسنده , , Kai-Wei K. and Lan، نويسنده , , Ya-Hui and Tang، نويسنده , , Fu-In، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
8
From page :
177
To page :
184
Abstract :
SummaryAim m of the study was to develop and validate an instrument to evaluate nursesʹ knowledge and to understand the obstacles that they encounter when administering resuscitation medications. ound icient knowledge is a major factor in nursesʹ drug administration errors. Resuscitation involves situations in which doctors issue oral orders, and is inherently highly stressful. Sufficient knowledge is vital for nurses if they are to respond quickly and accurately when administering resuscitation medications. s s-sectional study was conducted. A questionnaire (20 true-false questions) developed from literature and expert input, and validated by subject experts and one pilot study, was used to evaluate nursesʹ knowledge of resuscitation medications. Stratified sampling and descriptive statistics were applied. s l of 188 nurses participated. The overall correct answer rate was 70.5% and the greater the nurseʹs work experience the higher the score. Only 8% of nurses considered themselves to have sufficient knowledge and 73.9% hoped to gain more training about resuscitation medications. The leading obstacle reported was “interruption of the drug administration procedure on resuscitation” (62.8%). Seventeen out of 20 questions achieved a discriminatory power of over 0.36, indicating good to excellent questions. In the study, a total of 16 resuscitation medication errors were reported by the participants, in which the errors involved atropine (five cases), epinephrine (three cases) and others (eight cases). The errors mainly involved misinterpretation of orders, insufficient knowledge and confusing certain drugs for other look-alike drugs. sion ce-based results strongly suggest that nurses have insufficient knowledge and could benefit from longer working experience and additional training about resuscitation medications. Further research to validate the instrument is needed and the education of nurses regarding resuscitation medications is recommended.
Keywords :
Knowledge , Resuscitation medications , Medication errors , Nurses
Journal title :
Nurse Education Today
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
Nurse Education Today
Record number :
1877768
Link To Document :
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