Rights of Administration
BCMA/MAR
Orders
High-Alert
Legal
100

How many rights of medication administration are required before giving a medication?

What are six rights

Rationale: Using all six rights reduces medication errors and protects patient safety.

100

This system uses the patient wristband to prevent errors.

What is barcode medication administration (BCMA)

Rationale: Barcode Medication Administration confirms the right patient and medication.

100

This type of order means “give as needed based on a parameter.”

PRN

Rationale: PRN medications require assessment before administration.

100

Name one medication class considered high‑alert.

Insulin, opioids, anticoagulants, chemotherapy, neuromuscular blocking agents

Rationale: High‑alert meds carry increased risk for harm if misused.

100

Laws that define what an LPN can and cannot do are outlined in what document?

Nursing practice act

Rationale: Each state has its’ own nurse practice act. States typically follow federal laws and modify to meet population-based needs

200

Which "Right" tells the nurse to identify the person receiving the medication

Right Patient

200

List at least 3 advantages of BCMA.

Increased caution, increased safety, fewer errors

*Remember, this does NOT replace clinical judgment and critical thinking

200

What type of order is "emergency use"

Stat

200

Why does IV potassium require extreme caution or RN verification?

It can cause fatal cardiac dysrhythmias.

Rationale: High‑alert meds carry increased risk for harm if misused.

200

True or false: LPNs in the state of Florida can administer IV medications?

True

Rationale: LPNs may administer IV medications after completing an IV certification class and test.

300

Which "Right" tells the nurse to confirm the appropriate amount of drug is given?

Right Dose

300

What should the nurse check EVERY time they complete BCMA?

Patient identifiers in the medical record & on the wrist band. Seek verbal identification from the patient.

300

What type of order is used when a medication is regular or on a fixed scheduled?

Routine

300

What is a nursing practice for administration of high-alert, or controlled, substances?

Independent double verification, stored separately

300

True or False: Following a provider order automatically makes an action legal.

False


Rationale: Nurses are legally responsible for questioning unsafe or inappropriate orders.

400

Which "Right" tells the nurse to confirm the medication is given via the correct body system?

Right Route

400

What are the two (2) patient identifiers?

Name and date of birth

400

What type of order is given to meet a specific parameter?

Standing order

400

A nurse notices two (2) medication vials with similar labels stored together. Why is this especially dangerous with high-alert medicatons?

Increased risk of look-alike medication errors

400

Which type of order should be avoided whenever possible due to legal risk?

Verbal orders


Rationale: Verbal orders increase the risk of miscommunication and medication errors.

500

Which "Right" tells the nurse to ensure the administered medication is accurately displayed in the medical record?

Right Documentation

500

What are ways that BCMA can fail?

Work arounds (skipped scanning, not verbalizing name/DOB)

500

Who is authorized to give orders?

Physicians, PAs, NPs ("providers")

500

Why are titratable IV infusions considered high-alert medications?

Incorrect rates can rapidly cause severe patient harm

500

A provider writes an order for a medication dose that exceeds safe limits. What should the nurse do FIRST?

Hold the medication and contact the provider


Rationale: Administering a known unsafe dose places legal liability on the nurse.

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