Verbal orders are prone to misinterpretation and can harm patients, as evidenced by dozens of cases reported to the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority where misheard verbal orders resulted in overdoses or wrong medications. A hospital study found a 9% error rate with verbal orders but reduced it to zero by having medical staff read back verbal orders to confirm accuracy.
Verbal orders are prone to misinterpretation and can harm patients, as evidenced by dozens of cases reported to the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority where misheard verbal orders resulted in overdoses or wrong medications. A hospital study found a 9% error rate with verbal orders but reduced it to zero by having medical staff read back verbal orders to confirm accuracy.
Verbal orders are prone to misinterpretation and can harm patients, as evidenced by dozens of cases reported to the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority where misheard verbal orders resulted in overdoses or wrong medications. A hospital study found a 9% error rate with verbal orders but reduced it to zero by having medical staff read back verbal orders to confirm accuracy.
Verbal orders are prone to misinterpretation and can harm patients, as evidenced by dozens of cases reported to the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority where misheard verbal orders resulted in overdoses or wrong medications. A hospital study found a 9% error rate with verbal orders but reduced it to zero by having medical staff read back verbal orders to confirm accuracy.
frequently misinterpreted and can lead to significant patient harm. Healthcare facilities in Pennsylvania have reported dozens of cases to the Patient Safety Authority in which misinterpretation of verbal orders resulted in serious medication overdoses and in patients receiving the wrong drug. In a recent study, one hospital found an error rate of 9% with verbal orders. They reduced this error rate to zero by implementing a read back protocol. Source: Vossmeyer MT. Improving patient safety using a verbal order read back process. Pediatric Academic Societies Annual Meeting; 2006 Apr 29; San Francisco (CA).