Objective
To quantify the variability in the concentration of drug infusions prepared on an intensive care unit and establish whether
there was a relationship between the quality of syringe labeling and drug preparation.
Design
Audit carried out over 3 weeks in May 2006 and completed in May 2007.
Setting
The adult neurosciences critical care unit of a UK university teaching hospital.
Interventions
Daily collections of discarded syringes containing midazolam, insulin, norepinephrine, dopamine, potassium or magnesium.
Measurements and results
Residual solutions in the syringes were sampled and the concentrations measured. Syringe labels were inspected and awarded
a score for labeling quality based on an 11-point scale. A total of 149 syringes were analyzed. Six of the magnesium syringes
contained 4–5 times too much Mg2+, presumably because of confusion about converting millimoles to grams. The majority of the other infusions differed from
the expected concentration by more than 10%. Magnesium infusions were least likely to be properly labeled (p = 0.012), and there was a positive correlation between quality of syringe labeling and drug preparation (p = 0.002). After the introduction of a new electrolyte prescription chart, magnesium and potassium preparation significantly
improved but there was still substantial variability.
Conclusions
These findings present a strong argument for the use of pre-prepared syringes or standardized drug preparation and labeling
systems. They also highlight once again the difficulties healthcare professionals encounter when dealing with different ways
of expressing drug concentrations.
Keywords Medication error - Critical care - Intensive care - Pharmaceutical preparations - Adverse drug events - Safety management