Labeling (Medications, Solutions, Containers) for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Included In This Lesson
Study Tools For Labeling (Medications, Solutions, Containers) for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Outline
Labeling (Medications, Solutions, Containers)
Guidelines:
- At time of draw, always
- Date, concentration, drug
- Pre-made stickers best but beware
- Color coded
- Multi-dose label opened date
- Not for more than one case
- Cannot be left around OR
- Label on field! When placed
- Container, syringe, etc
- Yes also NS and SW
- Record amount from field as used
- Anticipate need for turnover
Considerations:
- Pre-filled doses best
- Verify meds on field with board, time out, RN to place on field with tech
- Yes, label propofol we know its white too bad
- If mixed up on field, discard, restart
- Omnipaque vs Visipaque
- Visipaque isosmotic to blood
- Omnipaque not for blood
Nurse’s role:
- Often pull meds from pharmacy/pyxis
- Not always, MD to bring from clinic OK with RN verification
- Document administration
- Verify labeling, dosage, etc
- Police the OR
Pitfalls:
- Not labeling concentration
- Non-standard color code
- Emergent staff relief, nothing written
- How many syringes did you start with?
- SW and NS mixup
- Crani!
- Unique mixes (not 50/50)
- Local toxicity with mix
Examples:
- Local and vasopressin labeled on field, drawn into syringe. Later notice syringe not labeled (discard syringes, restart from
known accurate label or from beginning)
Linchpins (Key Points):
- No medication error is made knowingly, and the OR removes most safety rails to med administration
Transcript
References
- Association of periOperative Registered Nurses. (2022). Guidelines for Perioperative
Practice (2022 ed.).