In the wake of the nursing shortage due to the COVID worldwide pandemic, exhausted nurses with inadequate personal protective equipment and working numerous overtime shifts, comes the release of a horrific story of a fatal medication error at the hands of a nurse.
RaDonda Vaught, a 36-year-old critical care RN made a fatal medication error in 2017 when she administered vecuronium, a muscle relaxant that stopped her female patient Donna Murphy from breathing, instead of giving Versed, which is a sedative.
Important factors that contributed to this event was that RaDonda was a float nurse for the entire hospital that was understaffed. The Pyxis machine was broken, and nurses had to hit override throughout the shift in order to obtain any medication. She was also orienting a new nurse in addition to working as a float to a unit she was not familiar with, and the patient was not on a cardiac monitor in the MRI machine.
By the time the patient had a cardiac arrest, she identified the medication error and self-reported believing in the culture of safety for nurses and patients. Vanderbilt Hospital was found lacking in patient safety procedures and fined to make safety changes that were not followed.
This is every nurse’s worst nightmare. There was no doubt it was a medication error and not intentional, however the outcome was the death of her 75-year-old patient and the resultant loss of her nursing license with a three-year probation for involuntary manslaughter.
The additional serious implication is the fear nurses now feel about a threatened manslaughter sentence or any legal ramification for any medication error. That fear may prevent people from going into nursing or reporting a medication error.
Convicting a nurse for a grave error threatens the morale of all nurses and patient safety by creating a culture of fear regarding medication administration. Solutions need to be found that keep patients safe and nurses protected in a culture of support.
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