Steps to Adapt the Medication Administration Error Survey in Highly Specialised Units—Polish Perspectives
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Aim of the Study
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. The Scale Was Adopted Due to the Polish Environment, as Outlined in the Following Steps from the Literature [26]
2.1.1. Step 1—Cross-Cultural Adaptation of the Scale
- The translation of the tool;
- Evaluation by the Review Committee;
- Resending of the information about changes in the Polish version of the scale to the first author;
- Conducting a pilot study;
- Carrying out a descriptive and reliability analysis using statistical data.
2.1.2. Step 2—Psychometric Validation of Translated Scale
2.2. Medication Administration Survey (MAEs)
2.3. Practical Use of the Medicines Administration Errors (MAEs) Questionnaire
2.4. The Medication Administration Error Reporting Survey in Poland
3. Results
3.1. Step 1—Descriptive Analysis with Cronbach’s Alpha Calculation
3.2. Step 2—Exploratory Factor Analysis
4. Discussion
4.1. Scale Validity and Reliability
4.2. Contribution to the Nursing Field in High Specialistic Units
5. Conclusions
6. Limitations of the Study
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Public Involvement Statement
Guidelines and Standards Statement
Use of Artificial Intelligence
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Age | N | % |
---|---|---|
<30 years old | 15 | 17.44 |
31–50 years old | 49 | 56.98 |
more than 50 | 22 | 25.58 |
Sex | ||
F | 75 | 87.21 |
M | 11 | 12.79 |
Nursing Education | ||
Bachelor in Nursing | 58 | 67.44 |
Master in Nursing | 24 | 27.91 |
Registered Nurse | 4 | 4.65 |
Additional qualifications, courses | ||
Specializtion | 75 | 87.21 |
Qualification course | 11 | 12.79 |
Years of experience | ||
5–10> years | 11 | 12.79 |
10–20> years | 25 | 29.06 |
20–30>years | 13 | 15.12 |
30–40 years | 10 | 11.63 |
Current position | ||
Staff Nurse | 61 | 70.93 |
Head Nurse | 17 | 19.77 |
Contract Nurse | 8 | 9.30 |
Type of employment | ||
Full-time | 71 | 82.56 |
Part-time | 6 | 6.98 |
Contract | 9 | 10.46 |
Hospital level due to the European Reference Hospital Network | ||
III | 30 | 34.88 |
II | 34 | 39.53 |
Reliability Measure: Cronbach’s Alpha | Value | Interpretation |
---|---|---|
Part A of the questionnaire (questions 1–29) | 0.93 | very good |
Part B of the questionnaire (questions 30–45) | 0.94 | very good |
Part C of the questionnaire | 0.97 | very good |
Subscales Items | Factor Load Value | Eigenvalue | Variance (%) | Cumulative Variance (%) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Factor I | 1. The names of many medications are similar. | −0.560 | 16.837 | 25.903 | 25.903 |
4. Physicians’ medication orders are not legible. | −0.523 | ||||
5. Physicians’ medication orders are not clear. | −0.605 | ||||
6. Physicians change orders frequently. | −0.637 | ||||
7. Abbreviations are used instead of writing the orders out completely. | −0.618 | ||||
34. Medication error is not clearly defined. | −0.568 | ||||
35. Nurses may not think the error is important enough to be reported. | −0.610 | ||||
36. Nurses believe that other nurses will think they are incompetent if they make medication errors. | −0.720 | ||||
37. The patient or family might develop a negative attitude toward the nurse, or may sue the nurse if a medication error is reported. | −0.663 | ||||
38. The expectation that medications be given precisely as ordered is unrealistic. | −0.571 | ||||
39. Nurses are afraid the physician will reprimand them for the medication error. | −0.590 | ||||
40. Nurses fear adverse consequences from reporting medication errors. | −0.643 | ||||
41. The response by nursing administration does not match the severity of the error. | −0.662 | ||||
42. Nurses could be blamed if something happens to the patient as a result of the medication error. | −0.605 | ||||
43. No positive feedback is given for passing medications correctly. | −0.680 | ||||
44. Too much emphasis is placed on med errors as a measure of the quality of nursing care provided. | −0.551 | ||||
45. When med errors occur, nursing administration focuses on the individual rather than looking at the systems as a potential cause of the error. | −0.557 | ||||
64. Wrong fluid | −0.562 | ||||
65. Wrong rate of administration | −0.538 | ||||
Factor II | 48. Wrong patient | 0.650 | 9.285 | 14.285 | 40.187 |
49. Wrong dose | 0.621 | ||||
50. Wrong drug | 0.726 | ||||
51. Medication is omitted | 0.695 | ||||
52. Medication is given, but has not been ordered by the physician | 0.560 | ||||
53. Medication administered after the order to discontinue has been written | 0.561 | ||||
55. Wrong method of administration | 0.554 | ||||
57. Wrong patient | 0.731 | ||||
58. Wrong dose | 0.719 | ||||
59. Wrong drug | 0.679 | ||||
60. Medication is omitted. | 0.640 | ||||
61. Medication is given, but has not been ordered by the physician. | 0.612 | ||||
62. Medication administered after the order to discontinue has been written | 0.623 | ||||
63. Given to patient with a known allergy | 0.642 | ||||
Factor III | 26. Errors are made in the electronic/paper order system | −0.519 | 5.512 | 8.480 | 48.667 |
2. Different medications look alike. | 0.588 | ||||
3. The packaging of many medications is similar. | 0.612 | ||||
Factor IV | 9. Pharmacy delivers incorrect doses to this unit. | −0.503 | 3.480 | 5.353 | 54.020 |
10. Pharmacy does not prepare the med correctly. | −0.525 | ||||
11. Pharmacy does not label the med correctly. | −0.522 | ||||
Factor V | 18. Nurses on this unit have limited knowledge about medications. | 0.547 | 2.594 | 3.991 | 58.012 |
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Kwiecień-Jaguś, K.; Mędrzycka-Dąbrowska, W.; Kopeć, M. Steps to Adapt the Medication Administration Error Survey in Highly Specialised Units—Polish Perspectives. Nurs. Rep. 2025, 15, 173. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep15050173
Kwiecień-Jaguś K, Mędrzycka-Dąbrowska W, Kopeć M. Steps to Adapt the Medication Administration Error Survey in Highly Specialised Units—Polish Perspectives. Nursing Reports. 2025; 15(5):173. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep15050173
Chicago/Turabian StyleKwiecień-Jaguś, Katarzyna, Wioletta Mędrzycka-Dąbrowska, and Monika Kopeć. 2025. "Steps to Adapt the Medication Administration Error Survey in Highly Specialised Units—Polish Perspectives" Nursing Reports 15, no. 5: 173. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep15050173
APA StyleKwiecień-Jaguś, K., Mędrzycka-Dąbrowska, W., & Kopeć, M. (2025). Steps to Adapt the Medication Administration Error Survey in Highly Specialised Units—Polish Perspectives. Nursing Reports, 15(5), 173. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep15050173