Value of improved nursing measures and enhanced nursing management to reduce the occurrence of adverse events in pediatric infusion.

World J Clin Cases

Department of Obstertrics and Gynecology, Beijing Shijitan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing 100038, China.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Intravenous infusion can lead to medication errors, and improving nursing practices may reduce these adverse events in pediatric patients.
  • A study analyzed data from 130 children receiving infusions, comparing traditional nursing care to enhanced nursing interventions over one year.
  • Results showed that the observation group had significantly lower rates of adverse events, higher compliance, and greater family satisfaction compared to the control group, indicating that improved nursing measures are effective.

Article Abstract

Background: Intravenous infusion is a common method of drug administration in clinical practice. Errors in any aspect of the infusion process, from the verification of medical orders, preparation of the drug solution, to infusion by nursing staff, may cause adverse infusion events.

Aim: To analyzed the value of improving nursing measures and enhancing nursing management to reduce the occurrence of adverse events in pediatric infusion.

Methods: The clinical data of 130 children who received an infusion in the pediatric department of our hospital from May 2020 to May 2021 were analyzed and divided into two groups according to the differences in nursing measures and nursing management: 65 patients in the control group received conventional nursing and nursing management interventions, while 65 patients in the observation group received improved nursing measure interventions and enhanced nursing management. The occurrence of adverse events, compliance of children, satisfaction of children's families, and complaints regarding the transfusion treatment were recorded in both groups.

Results: The incidence of fluid extravasation and infusion set dislodgement in the observation group were 3.08% and 1.54%, respectively, which were significantly lower than 12.31% and 13.85% in the control group ( < 0.05), while repeated punctures and medication addition errors in the observation group were 3.08% and 0.00%, respectively, which were lower than 9.23% and 3.08% in the control group, but there was no significant difference ( > 0.05). The compliance rate of children in the observation group was 98.46% (64/65), which was significantly higher than 87.69% (57/65) in the control group, and the satisfaction rate of children's families was 96.92% (63/65), which was significantly higher than 86.15% (56/65) in the control group ( < 0.05). The observation group did not receive any complaints from the child's family, whereas the control group received four complaints, two of which were due to the crying of the child caused by repeated punctures, one due to the poor attitude of the nurse, and one due to medication addition errors, with a cumulative complaint rate of 6.15%. The cumulative complaint rate of the observation group was significantly lower than that of the control group ( < 0.05).

Conclusion: Improving nursing measures and enhancing nursing management can reduce the incidence of fluid extravasation and infusion set dislodgement in pediatric patients, improve children's compliance and satisfaction of their families, and reduce family complaints.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11235543PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.12998/wjcc.v12.i20.4130DOI Listing

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