RN flushing practices

PLEASE NOTE:   Posts made to this forum should not be considered as the expressed opinions of, nor should be considered endorsed by, the Medication Safety Officer’s Society (MSOS) or the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP). 

Make sure your email is up-to-date
In order to continue to receive updates from MSOS, as well as forum posts and other valuable information as a member of MSOS, please be sure to update your email address with us, whenever it changes. If you need assistance doing so, please send an email to jrufo@ismp.org

12 posts / 0 new
Last post
Lara Ellinger
Lara Ellinger's picture
Offline
Last seen: 1 month 4 days ago
Joined: 12/06/2016 - 16:07
RN flushing practices

We discovered a concerning nursing flushing practice that is occurring in our clinical research unit. After an IV investigational medication has been administered, the nurses are drawing up 30 mL of fluid (usually 0.9% NS) and injecting it into the empty bag. They then run the 30 mL at the infusion rate the drug was run at. They do this to ensure the entire dose of investigational drug is delivered, and state this is common practice across the country. We have safety, sterility, and documentation concerns and are wondering if this is actually done elsewhere.

Thanks,

Lara Ellinger, PharmD, BCPS
Northwestern Memorial Hospital