Improving Patient Safety by Decreasing the Number of Insulin Pen Injection Errors

Running head: IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 1
Improving Patient Safety by Decreasing the Number of Insulin Pen Injection Errors
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IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 2
Abstract
About six million of those who suffer from diabetes use insulin as a way of controlling their
blood glucose. Therefore, it is not surprising that insulin consistently ranks among the topmost
dispensed medication. While insulin has traditionally been administered through injection using
syringe and vial only, the use of insulin pens has become popular. Insulin pens are supposed to
be used several times, but this use should be restricted to one patient only and a new needle used
for every injection. This is because the patient’s blood could flow back into the cartridge, thereby
heightening the risk of pathogen transmission if used on another patient. One of the most
efficient approaches to preventing this is through the order- and patient-specific barcode
scanning. This entails scanning both the patient and using an order specific, EHR-generated
barcode attached to the insulin injector pen. This paper focuses on the QSEN competency of
patient safety and proposes a similar system to eliminate insulin pen injection errors.
Key words: insulin, pen injection, EHR, barcode scanning, patient safety
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 3
Introduction
Among diabetic patients, an estimated six million use insulin as a way of controlling their
levels of blood glucose (Truong, 2017). In fact, there has been an increase in the use of insulin
together with oral therapy, perhaps because of its introduction during the initial phase of
treatment for individuals with type 2 diabetes. Therefore, it is not surprising that insulin
systematically features among the most dispensed medication. It is worth noting that insulin is
included in the Institute of Safe Medical Practices (ISMP) list of high-alert medications, which
constitutes drugs whose risk of causing considerable harm to patients when administered in error
is extremely high. Insulin has the potential to cause considerable harm to the patient when
administered incorrectly. In this regard, correct insulin administration is of critical importance
because a wrong technique or dosage could cause severe hypoglycemia or hypoglycemic crisis,
requiring visits to the emergency department (ED). Traditionally, insulin has often been
administered through injection using syringe and vial only. While this method is still in use, it is
no longer popular. Today, over 60 percent of insulin users globally use insulin pen devices in the
administration of insulin.
Insulin injector pens were at first developed to assist patients at home to administer their
insulin doses correctly and without difficulty. However, these devices have since found
widespread use in hospitals and clinics, as well. While insulin pens are supposed to be used
several times, this use should be restricted to one patient only and a new needle used for every
injection. Therefore, the use of one insulin pen for multiple patients should be zealously
discouraged because of the potential backflow of blood into the cartridge, thereby heightens the
risk of pathogen transmission in the event the pen is used on multiple patients even when a fresh
needle is used (Paparella, 2015). Some studies have found macrophages, red blood cells,
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 4
epithelial cells, and hemoglobin in an estimated 58 percent of insulin in older insulin pen designs
while in newer designs, an estimated 6 percent of cartridges have been found to be contaminated
(Le Flotch et al., 1998; Sonoki et al., 2001; Herdman et al., 2013).
Errors in the methods used in insulin administration abound even with the improvements
and progression in insulin pen technology. Thousands of patients have received and continue to
receive injections from possibly contaminated pens, usually involving the cross-patient use of
insulin pen devices. Consequently, several agencies and national organizations have issued
recommendations to avert this potentially catastrophic oversight. These include never using pen
injectors for several patients, even with a change of needle; clearly labeling the pen with
patients identifying information to make certain that injector pens are restricted to one
individual only; and putting in place policies to address issues related to patient safety in
hospitals and clinics that use insulin pens. Hospital personnel might not realize that skin and
blood cells can contaminate the insulin solution in the pen when the device is in use and that
using a new needle does nothing to mitigate this risk. As part of safe practice, it is important that
whenever multiple patient use is detected, healthcare personnel should promptly inform the
exposed patient and provide appropriate follow-up, which must include testing for blood-borne
pathogens (Paparella, 2015). This paper focuses on the QSEN competency of patient safety
through the elimination of insulin pen injection errors, which can negatively impact the health of
those with diabetes and result in more severe health issues.
Background
Insulin pens injectors (commonly referred to as insulin “pens”) are designed for multiple
use on a single patient using a fresh needle each time an injection is administered. Therefore,
insulin pens should never be employed for several patients because the backflow of blood and
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 5
contamination of insulin cartridge by skin cells could happen after injection, leading to the risk
of blood-borne pathogen transmission (such as hepatitis and HIV) in the event that the pen is
employed for multiple patients, even when a fresh needle is used. Many patients have received
insulin injections from possibly contaminated pens, usually due to unrecognized or improper
sharing of pen devices that have been used previously. Numerous studies have established that
biological material can flow back into the insulin cartridge during insulin administration, thereby
heightening the risk of pathogen transmission in cases where the insulin pen is used on several
patients (Grissinger, 2017). Using a fresh needle does not lessen this risk.
A study by Sonoki et al. (2001) identified hemoglobin in 6 out of the 146 (about 4
percent) of insulin cartridges examined while a study by Herdman et al. (2013) found
contamination in the form of hemoglobin or blood cells in about 6 percent of cartridges in newer
models of spent insulin injector pens. Because insulin pens must never be shared in a hospital, an
important question becomes how the use of such pens for wrong (or multiple) patients occurs in
a hospital setting. An analysis of several studies has identified the contributory factors in
connection with the inappropriate sharing and wrong-patient errors. The principal contributory
factors include distraction, inappropriate disposal of insulin pens from previous patients who
have been transferred or discharged, the wrong name of the patient on the pen, putting back the
pen in an incorrect medication storage, time pressure, as well as confusion between hospital
bunkmates. According to the Institute of Safe Medication Practices (2017), even though nurses
are aware that patients should not share pens, barcode scanning systems have often revealed that
nurses frequently take the wrong insulin and insulin pens, and could easily administer these
doses in the absence of an alert.
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 6
In fact, the Institute of Safe Medication Practices (2017) further notes that even in
barcode scans, patients continue to receive insulin from pen injectors for other patients, partly
due to the mix-up of pens for different patients, fetching the wrong patient’s injector pen, and
using injector pens left by one patient on another patient in the same bed and room. Another
common cause is the failure to follow up on “wrong patient” alerts from the barcode scanning
system. Even though the extent of biologic contamination that occurs due to insulin pen injection
errors is thought to be significant enough to occasion the spread of blood-borne pathogens, so
far, no lucid evidence exists of pathogen transmission resulting from shared insulin pen injectors
or the use of insulin pens (inadvertent or otherwise) on the wrong patient. It cannot be
overemphasized that the use of the same insulin pens for multiple patients can lead to adverse
outcomes. In practice, such errors can be averted using various intervention, including involving
patients in their treatment and following up closely on barcode alerts.
Assessment
The author recently attended a quality review meeting at the hospital where she works
because there was an insulin pen injection error that she had been involved. The hospital uses
EPIC Computer Charting in administering medications that require two nurses to verify insulin
before giving the medication. Notwithstanding this strategy to prevent the use of insulin pens on
multiple patients, errors still occurred that were attributable to reasons beyond deficits in
knowledge or erroneous beliefs that using a fresh needle is enough to avert cross-contamination.
The author was the nurse who verified the medication dosage, but she did not verify the name on
the insulin pen. As a result, the pen device that was used to administer insulin to the patient had
been from a previous patient and had been taken from the lock box in the patient's room.
Moreover, the insulin pen barcode itself was scanned instead of the patient's label associated
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 7
with each patient. Consequently, the patient was given the right dosage of one unit of insulin SQ,
although using another patient's insulin pen. This is prohibited at the hospital where the author
works. The hospital does not allow sharing of insulin pens because of the exposure of patients to
blood-borne diseases. Worse still, the patient's insulin pen was from the previous patient who
had been diagnosed with HIV and hepatitis C.
The Proposed Solution
Medication misadventure usually takes place along a series of steps. These steps include
medication prescription, interpretation and verification of the prescription, pharmacy dispensing,
and the administration of the prescription. Studies have identified best practices and safety
measures that ensure the appropriate use of insulin pens and the prevention of ‘wrong patient
pen’ cases. One of these practices is the order- and patient-specific barcode scanning. Because
the hospital already has two nurses to verify insulin using the EPIC Computer Charting system,
the solution that this author proposes entails the use of an order specific, EHR-generated barcode
attached to the insulin injector pen. This will leverage on the existing system by meeting the
current gap using electronic alerts within the current electronic health record (EHR). The benefit
of this solution is that by scanning the patient’s wristband followed by the order-specific
barcode, it will be easier to verify both the appropriateness of the insulin, as well as the identity
of the intended patient. This is unlike the current practice, where the patient’s wristband and the
manufacturer’s barcode are scanned, thereby verifying only the type of insulin and not the right
pen.
With the proposed solution, an alert will display immediately on screen if a nurse scans
an order-specific barcode attached to the wrong insulin pen, thereby preventing further
documentation by the electronic medication administration record (eMAR) system. Using such a
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 8
system, the nurse must then obtain the correct insulin pen. It is worth noting that the proposed
solution is a high leverage strategy to reduce and possibly eliminate the occurrence of “wrong-
pen” errors, and indeed other types of errors in insulin administration. Therefore, to be
successful, the hospital will have to implement a BCMA (barcode medication administration),
utilize an eMAR record, and engage an EHR provider to establish if the design logic that
controls the barcode system can allow for the continuous scanning of order-specific barcodes to
be used with several orders for the same type of insulin. The EHR provider will also need to
establish if the barcode programming can allow for continued use in the event of discontinuation
of the specific order for which the injector pen label was created, but there are other active orders
for the same type of insulin. This capability might be lacking in the current barcode and EHR
system being used by the hospital.
Implementation Plan
Healthcare providers have the responsibility of maintaining patient safety because any
oversight can have dire consequences for the patient. The probability of successfully
reprogramming the evolutionary tendencies of humans is exceedingly small. Instead, it is more
practical to put in place a medication system to support healthcare providers in regular and
recurring functions since these are more susceptible to unintended errors. In supporting medical
personnel, the proposed solution will maximize nurses’ time for other functions, such as the
assessment and treatment of patients, as well as patient interaction. The implementation plan has
been condensed into a series of six successive steps discussed below:
Creation of the Implementation Team and Identifying Project Leadership
The first step towards implementing the proposed solution will entail putting in place an
implementation team, which will include pharmacists, physicians, nurse leaders, administrative
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 9
staff, medical assistants, and compliance office personnel. The most important roles with regard
to the implementation are the project manager, the lead physician, and the lead user. The project
manager will cooperate closely with the system vendor and all personnel to not only ensure that
all stakeholders focus on their respective timelines, but also to track the project progress and
manage any routine issues. The lead physicians will guide the hospital all through the
implementation process and will act as the liaison between the users and administrative and
technical personnel. Conversely, the users of the system will assume the role of the in-house
specialist in the new system and, therefore, will be tasked with configuring the system,
developing standard operating procedures, and creating order sets.
Communicating the Need for Change
Communicating the reasons and goals for change is important to the success of any
project. Thus, project leaders will have to be fully engaged and committed to the success of the
change project. Grasping the need for change constitutes the first step in engendering new
behaviors within the organization. Excellent leadership will be required in ensuring that the goal
and the status of the change project, which seeks to entrench the proposed solution, are well
understood. In this manner, getting down into the particular requirements of the system will be
easier. It should be noted that by specifying the essential functions upfront, project leaders will
minimize the costs associated with amending system requirements during the implementation
phase.
Identifying Hardware Needs
Because the proposed solution will involve EHR-generated barcode attached to the
insulin injector pen, it will be prudent to identify EHR hardware needs for the new system. The
Institute of Medicine has come up with a list of important aspects of an effective EHR system.
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 10
These include health information storage (such as a database server) and a software for managing
the information coming into the EHR (such as the patient’s identity, the required insulin dosage,
and whether the scanned barcode on the pen matches that of the patient) to make certain that they
are addressed appropriately by the nurse or physician. Electronic connectivity and
communication should also permit the system, which links barcode scanners to the EHR system,
to communicate flawlessly over the network.
Configuring the System
The third step in the implementation of the proposed solution will be the configuring of
the new system. This will involve working with the EHR provider to ensure that all security
measures are met. It might also require that the hospital complete a HIPAA risk assessment. The
hospital can also customize the system to optimize workflow by developing a catalog of build
aspects that are external to the system, including computerized order entry (COE), medication
management settings, and patient history settings. It will also be prudent to identify hardware
needs for the proposed system as part of the implementation.
Deciding how to Launch the System: Incremental versus “Big Bang”
The hospital will have the option of implementing the solution to all personnel and
patients straight away and on the same day, an approach that is known as the “big bang,” or turn
on selected functions in an incremental or step-wise approach. The second approach will involve
availing the system to certain departments only and later rolling it out slowly to the other
departments. Nurses will begin to acclimatize to the new system once the unit leaders, nurse
educators, and other members of the project team have decided on the approach to be used in
launching the new system. A comparison between the two implementation approaches is
presented in Table 1 below:
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 11
Table 1: A Comparison between Incremental and “Big Bang” Approaches
Because this paper focuses on the QSEN competency of patient safety, the immediate approach
to implementing the proposed solution is favored. This is because this approach entails using the
new system for all diabetes patients within the hospital who need to use pen injector devices in
administering their insulin doses. Taking the incremental approach would mean using the new
system according to the number of patients. An example would be to make the system available
for only a few patients upon being rolled out, and gradually increase this number over time.
Training Personnel
The training of personnel is crucial to the success of any EHR and eMAR system.
Therefore, the last step of the implementation of the new solution will be to create a training
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 12
schedule to ensure that all staff members have the requisite skills and knowledge to use the new
system upon being launched.
Conclusion
Traditionally, insulin has often been administered through injection using syringe and
vial only. Today, an estimated 60 percent of insulin users globally use insulin pen devices in the
administration of insulin. While insulin pens are supposed to be used several times, this use
should be restricted to one patient only and a new needle used for every injection. This is
because of the potential backflow of blood and skin cells into the cartridge that heightens the risk
of spread of pathogens if the pen is employed on multiple patients. Even though nurses are aware
that patients should not share pens, barcode scanning systems have often revealed that nurses
frequently take the wrong insulin and could easily administer these doses in the absence of an
alert. The author recently attended a quality review meeting at the hospital where she works
because there was an insulin pen injection error that she had been involved. She failed to verify
the name on the insulin pen and, as a result, the pen device that was used to administer insulin to
the patient had been from the previous patient and was taken from the lock box in the patient's
room. To prevent such “wrong patient” errors while administering insulin to patients using
insulin injector pens, this paper proposes a solution that involves using an order specific, EHR-
generated barcode attached to the insulin injector pen to verify both the appropriateness of the
insulin, as well as the intended patient.
IMPROVING PATIENT SAFETY 13
References
Grissinger, M. (2017). "Wrong patient" insulin pen injections alarmingly frequent even with
barcode scanning. P & T, 42(9), 550-552.
Herdman, M. L., Larck, C., Schliesser, S. H., & Jelic, T. M. (2013). Biological contamination of
insulin pens in a hospital setting. American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, 70(14),
1244-1248.
Institute of Safe Medication Practices. (2017). ISMP guidelines for optimizing safe subcutaneous
insulin use in adults. Retrieved 10 November 2017 from
http://www.diabetesincontrol.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/Insulin-Guidelines-for-
Safety.pdf.
Le Flotch J.-P., Herbreteau, C., Lange, F., & Perlemuter, L. (1998). Biologic material in needles
and cartridges after insulin injection with a pen in diabetic patients. Diabetes Care, 21(9),
1502-1504.
Paparella, S. F. (2015). Insulin pens: Single patient use is mandatory for safety. Journal of
Emergency Nursing, 41(4), 340-342.
Sonoki, K., Yoshinari, M., Iwase, M., Tashiro, K., Iino, K., Wakisaka, M., & Fujishima, M.
(2001). Regurgitation of blood into insulin cartridges in the pen-like injectors. Diabetes
Care, 24(3), 603-604.
Truong, T. H., Nguyen, T. T., Armor, B. L., & Farley, J. R. (2017). Errors in the administration
technique of insulin pen devices: A result of insufficient education. Diabetes Therapy,
8(2), 221-226.

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