Labeling (Medications, Solutions, Containers) for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
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Included In This Lesson
Study Tools For Labeling (Medications, Solutions, Containers) for Certified Perioperative Nurse (CNOR)
Med Labeling (Cheatsheet)
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.).