Friday, December 7, 2018

A fatal medication error

A 75-year-old woman died at Vanderbilt University Medical Center after receiving intravenous vecuronium, a drug that causes muscle paralysis, instead of Versed, a sedative.

Here’s what happened.

She had been recovering well from an intraparenchymal brain hematoma after a fall. While awaiting a full body positron emission tomography (PET) scan in the radiology department, the patient said she was anxious about being in the machine because she was claustrophobic.

A doctor ordered Versed 2 mg IV in the electronic medical record at 2:47 PM. Two minutes later, the pharmacy verified the order. The radiology department staff said they could not give the medication because they were very busy and the patient would need to be monitored.

So nurse A, who was functioning as the “help all” nurse was asked by the patient’s nurse, nurse B, to go to radiology and give the medication. At 2:59 PM, nurse A went to the automated dispensing cabinet (ADC) and searched for Versed in the patient’s profile. When she couldn’t find the drug listed, she selected the “override” setting to search for the drug. She entered the first two letters of the drug, VE, and clicked on the first medication that popped up.