{"title":"Nurses’ Self-Reported Practices and Perceived Barriers of Medication Administration Safety in State Hospitals in Northern Nigeria","authors":"Yahaya Jafaru, M. Hassan","doi":"10.22038/PSJ.2021.57610.1325","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Introduction:Administering medication is a vital aspect of patients’ treatment and nurses play an essential role in it, with the responsibility of safety during the procedure. Nurse administrators are showing concern about patient safety, and one of the first steps to reduce medication administration errors is assessing the factors contributing to those errors.Materials and Methods: The study was descriptive and adopted cross-sectional design. The Medication Administration Safety Assessment Tool and instrument for assessing barriers to medication administration safety were used for data collection. Proportionate and systematic samplings were used in selecting the respondents. Data collected were analysed using SPSS version 26. Chi-square and ANOVA statistical tools were used for inferential analysis.Results: The majority (40.7%) of the respondents were having Good medication administration safety practices, but 19.1% had poor medication administration safety practices. Majority (41.6%) of the respondents had very low perceived barriers to medication administration safety. There was no significant association between hospital working experience and medication administration safety practices, P>0.05. The professional qualification of the respondents was associated with perceived barriers to medication administration safety, P<0.05.Conclusion:The medication administration safety practices range from good to very good practices, and there was a considerable number of respondents with poor practices. Moreover, a significant number of respondents perceived the barriers to medication administration safety practices as moderate, high or very high. These call for the need for frequent knowledge update through conferences, workshops and educational forums among nurses. Frequent investigation and mitigation of factors aggravating hospitals’ medication administration errors should be given more emphasis.","PeriodicalId":16681,"journal":{"name":"Journal of patient safety and quality improvement","volume":"14 1","pages":"155-162"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of patient safety and quality improvement","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.22038/PSJ.2021.57610.1325","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction:Administering medication is a vital aspect of patients’ treatment and nurses play an essential role in it, with the responsibility of safety during the procedure. Nurse administrators are showing concern about patient safety, and one of the first steps to reduce medication administration errors is assessing the factors contributing to those errors.Materials and Methods: The study was descriptive and adopted cross-sectional design. The Medication Administration Safety Assessment Tool and instrument for assessing barriers to medication administration safety were used for data collection. Proportionate and systematic samplings were used in selecting the respondents. Data collected were analysed using SPSS version 26. Chi-square and ANOVA statistical tools were used for inferential analysis.Results: The majority (40.7%) of the respondents were having Good medication administration safety practices, but 19.1% had poor medication administration safety practices. Majority (41.6%) of the respondents had very low perceived barriers to medication administration safety. There was no significant association between hospital working experience and medication administration safety practices, P>0.05. The professional qualification of the respondents was associated with perceived barriers to medication administration safety, P<0.05.Conclusion:The medication administration safety practices range from good to very good practices, and there was a considerable number of respondents with poor practices. Moreover, a significant number of respondents perceived the barriers to medication administration safety practices as moderate, high or very high. These call for the need for frequent knowledge update through conferences, workshops and educational forums among nurses. Frequent investigation and mitigation of factors aggravating hospitals’ medication administration errors should be given more emphasis.
导读:给药是患者治疗的一个重要方面,护士在其中起着至关重要的作用,在过程中的安全责任。护士管理人员对病人的安全表示关注,减少药物管理错误的第一步是评估导致这些错误的因素。材料与方法:本研究采用描述性和横断面设计。使用药物给药安全评估工具和药物给药安全障碍评估工具进行数据收集。在选择受访者时采用了比例抽样和系统抽样。收集的数据使用SPSS version 26进行分析。采用卡方和方差分析统计工具进行推理分析。结果:40.7%的受访医院给药安全规范良好,19.1%的受访医院给药安全规范不佳。大多数受访者(41.6%)对用药安全的认知障碍非常低。医院工作经验与用药安全行为无显著相关,P>0.05。被调查者的职业资格与感知给药安全障碍相关,P<0.05。结论:受访医院的给药安全规范从良好到非常良好,有相当多的受访医院的给药安全规范较差。此外,相当数量的答复者认为药物管理安全实践的障碍为中等、高或非常高。这就要求通过护士会议、讲习班和教育论坛经常更新知识。频繁调查和减少加重医院用药差错的因素应得到重视。