The perceptions of nurses towards barriers to the safe administration of medicines in mental health settings |
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Authors: | Steve Hemingway RMN BA MA PGDE Terence McCann RN MA PhD Hazel Baxter MPH BA RHV RHV RM RGN George Smith RMN MSC PGDip Kate Dewhirst Dip Clin Pharm BPharm MRPharmS |
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Affiliation: | 1. Mental Health, School of Health and Human Sciences, University of Huddersfield, Huddersfield, UK;2. Nursing Research, Victoria University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia;3. Older Peoples and Learning Disabilities Service Clinical Governance Support Team, Fieldhead Hospital, South West Yorkshire Partnership Foundation Health Trust, Wakefield, UK;4. Nurse Education Leadership and Development, Fieldhead Hospital, South West Yorkshire Partnership Foundation Health Trust, Wakefield, UK;5. Fieldhead Hospital, South West Yorkshire Partnership Foundation Health Trust, Wakefield, UK |
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Abstract: | The purpose of this study was to investigate perceptions of barriers to safe administration of medicines in mental health settings. A cross‐sectional survey was used, and 70 mental health nurses and 41 students were recruited from a mental health trust and a university in Yorkshire, UK. Respondents completed a questionnaire comprising closed‐ and open‐response questions. One item, which contained seven sub‐items, addressed barriers to safe administration of medication. Seven themes—five nurse‐ and prescriber‐focused and two service user‐focused—were abstracted from the data, depicting a range of barriers to safe administration of medicines. Nurse‐ and prescriber‐focused themes included environmental distractions, insufficient pharmacological knowledge, poorly written and incomplete medication documentation, inability to calculate medication dosage correctly, and work‐related pressure. Service user‐focused themes comprised poor adherence to medication regimens, and cultural and linguistic communication barriers with service users. Tackling medication administration error is predominantly an organizational rather than individual practitioner responsibility. |
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Keywords: | content analysis medication errors mental health nurses students survey |
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