Key Takeaways
- The "Rights" of medication administration include Right Client, Right Medication, Right Dose, Right Route, Right Time, and Right Documentation
- Use two patient identifiers (name and DOB or medical record number) before every medication administration - never use room number alone
- Medication reconciliation occurs at every transition of care: admission, transfer, and discharge to prevent polypharmacy errors
- The nurse has the legal right and professional obligation to refuse to administer any medication they believe is unsafe
- Bar-code medication administration (BCMA) technology reduces medication errors by 50-80% when used correctly
Medication Administration Rights
Safe medication administration is one of the nurse's most critical responsibilities. Medication errors are a leading cause of preventable patient harm, and the NCLEX tests your ability to prevent them through strict adherence to safety protocols.
The "Rights" of Medication Administration
The traditional "5 Rights" have expanded to include additional safety checks. Memorize these and apply them to every medication you administer.
| Right | What to Verify | How to Verify |
|---|---|---|
| Right Client | Correct patient identity | Two identifiers (name + DOB or MRN) |
| Right Medication | Correct drug | Check label 3 times; compare to MAR |
| Right Dose | Correct amount | Verify calculation; check parameters |
| Right Route | Correct administration path | Check order; assess appropriateness |
| Right Time | Correct timing | Within 30 minutes of scheduled time |
| Right Documentation | Accurate record | Document after administration |
| Right Reason | Appropriate indication | Understand why patient needs it |
| Right Response | Expected effect occurs | Monitor for therapeutic and adverse effects |
Patient Identification Protocol
Two Patient Identifiers Required - Every time, without exception:
-
Acceptable Identifiers:
- Full legal name (ask patient to state it)
- Date of birth
- Medical record number
- Assigned identification number
-
Never Use as Sole Identifier:
- Room number
- Bed number
- Physical characteristics
Exam Tip: If a question mentions verifying patient identity using only the room number or armband without a second identifier, that's the wrong answer.
The Three Label Checks
Check the medication label against the MAR (Medication Administration Record):
- When removing from storage (medication drawer/cabinet)
- When preparing the medication (at the bedside or medication cart)
- Before administering to the patient
Medication Reconciliation
Medication reconciliation is a systematic process of comparing all medications a patient is taking with newly ordered medications to avoid errors.
| Transition Point | Action Required |
|---|---|
| Admission | Obtain complete medication history; compare to admission orders |
| Transfer | Compare current meds to receiving unit orders |
| Discharge | Review all medications; provide written instructions |
This process prevents:
- Omissions (medications forgotten during transitions)
- Duplications (ordering a drug patient already takes)
- Interactions (new drugs conflicting with current regimen)
- Dose errors (using incorrect home doses)
Bar-Code Medication Administration (BCMA)
BCMA technology provides an electronic safety check:
- Scan the patient's wristband
- Scan the medication bar code
- System verifies the "5 Rights"
- Alerts nurse to potential errors
Critical Point: BCMA reduces errors significantly but does NOT replace nursing judgment. Always:
- Verify the medication visually
- Assess appropriateness for the patient
- Question any concerning alerts
- Override only when clinically justified (with documentation)
The Nurse's Right to Refuse
Nurses have a professional and legal obligation to refuse to administer medications they believe are unsafe. This includes:
- Doses outside normal range without clear justification
- Medications patient has documented allergies to
- Orders that conflict with patient's current condition
- Illegible or unclear orders
Correct Response: Do not administer. Clarify with the prescriber. Document the interaction. Notify the charge nurse or supervisor if unresolved.
High-Alert Medication Safety
Certain medications require additional safeguards due to their potential to cause harm. The ISMP (Institute for Safe Medication Practices) maintains this list:
| High-Alert Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Anticoagulants | Heparin, warfarin, enoxaparin |
| Insulins | All types |
| Opioids | Morphine, fentanyl, hydromorphone |
| Concentrated electrolytes | Potassium chloride, hypertonic saline |
| Chemotherapy agents | All |
| Cardiac glycosides | Digoxin |
| Neuromuscular blocking agents | Succinylcholine, rocuronium |
On the Exam
Expect questions that test:
- Proper patient identification techniques
- Response to medication errors or near-misses
- When to hold medications and notify the provider
- Documentation requirements
- Priority actions when errors occur
Before administering a medication, the nurse should verify the patient's identity using which method?
A nurse receives an order for a medication dose that appears unusually high. The nurse should:
During medication reconciliation at discharge, the nurse discovers the patient was taking a beta-blocker at home that was not continued during hospitalization. The priority action is to: