Five Rights of Medication Administration
High Alert Medications
IV Medication Safety
Look-Alike-Sound-Alike Medications
Medication Error Prevention Methods
100

This right ensures the medication is given to the correct person using two identifiers.

the right patient

100

This anticoagulant is commonly involved in medication errors and requires careful monitoring of aPTT.

heparin

100

This device controls the rate of IV medication delivery.

infusion pump

100

This opioid analgesic is often confused with morphine due to similar packaging.

hydromorphone

100

This scanning system verifies the patient and medication before administration.

bar-code medication administration (BCMA)

200

This right confirms the medication matches the provider’s order.

the right medication

200

This electrolyte medication should never be given as an IV push due to risk of fatal arrhythmias.

potassium chloride (KCl)

200

Many high-risk IV medications require this safety step where two clinicians independently verify the order and preparation.

independent double check

200

These two insulins sound similar and are stored away from each other. 

Humulin and Humalog

200

This type of medication error occurs when a drug is given in a larger amount than intended.

dosing error or overdose

300

This right ensures the medication is given in the correct amount.

the right drug

300

This medication class used to treat diabetes can cause severe hypoglycemia if misdosed.

insulin

300

This IV administration method delivers medication diluted in a small volume over time.

IV piggyback or secondary infusion

300

This antibiotic may be confused with cefazolin because of similar names.

ceftriaxone or cefepime

300

This report should be completed when a medication error or near miss occurs.

incident report

400

This right ensures medications are given at the correct scheduled time.

the right time

400

This opioid reversal medication is used in cases of respiratory depression from opioid overdose.

naloxone or Narcan

400

This complication occurs when IV fluid leaks into surrounding tissue.

IV infiltration

400

This medication safety strategy uses capitalization to differentiate similar drug names like hydrOXYzine and hydrALAZINE.

Tall Man lettering

400

Interruptions during medication preparation have been shown to increase medication errors; minimizing them during medication preparation supports this safety practice.

reducing interruptions or creating a "no interruption zone"

500

This right confirms whether the medication should be given orally, IV, IM, or another method.

the right route

500

The reversal agent for warfarin when the patient has an INR between 4.5 and 10, AND the patient is at a high risk of bleeding (INCLUDE CORRECT DOSING)

2.5-5 mg PO vitamin K

500

This dangerous complication occurs when vesicant drugs leak into tissue causing tissue necrosis.

IV extravasation

500

These two medications sound similar, but one is used to treat allergies and the other is used to treat high blood pressure.

hydroxyzine and hydralazine

500

This analytical process examines how a medication error occurred by identifying underlying system failures rather than blaming individuals.

root cause analysis (RCA)

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