Abstract

ObjectiveTo describe nurse preparation and administration of intermittent carbapenem infusions. Research methodology/designThis observational study documented the carbapenem infusion process to adult patients in three general intensive care units. Main outcome measuresTiming and duration of infusions were observed. Volumetric analysis of infusion items was conducted to determine loss of reconstituted carbapenem during preparation and administration phases. ResultsCarbapenem infusions (n = 223) administered to twenty adult patients were observed. Infusion duration guidance was variable, with two ICUs following current literature recommendations, and one ICU referring to medication package insert information. Within these parameters, only 60 % of infusions complied with infusion duration. Non-compliance with planned time of administration impacted on desired dosing intervals. Incomplete delivery of intended dose was found during: sub-optimal reconstitution of vials, incorrect number of vials reconstituted, failure to administer a dose (missed dose), and discarding antibiotic residue in infusion items. Volumetric analysis of infusion items showed mean dose losses of 4.9 % and 1.2 % in discarded vials and syringes. Mean drug losses of 6.3 % and 30.8 % occurred in discarded infusion bags and infusion lines respectively. No flushing guidance or practice was observed. ConclusionIncorrect nurse administration of antibiotics resulted in varying durations of infusions and the non-delivery of prescribed dose. Under-dosing has the potential to contribute to selection pressure for bacterial antibiotic resistance. The increasing frequency of intravenous delivery of antimicrobial agents through infusions requires an understanding of the required duration of administration and how to manage residual drug remaining in the intravenous line once the infusion is completed. Implications for clinical practiceFlushing of administration lines is not common practice following intermittent antimicrobial infusions. Although there are multi-factorial risk factors for antimicrobial resistance in the critical care arena, nurse infusion practice must ensure that patients receive intended antimicrobial treatment. Attention must be given to the potential for antimicrobial resistance from environmental contamination with the disposal of infusion items containing undelivered antimicrobial medication.

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