Scenario (Context for Your Report)
Mr. James Carter, 54-year-old male (ASA II, BMI 29), undergoes elective open right inguinal hernia repair with synthetic polypropylene mesh under general anaesthesia with ETT. The case proceeds uneventfully; he is transferred to PACU for recovery.
At the end-of-list Schedule 8 (S8) controlled drug count, the anaesthetic team identifies a discrepancy: two ampoules of fentanyl are missing and cannot be immediately reconciled against the controlled drug register, anaesthetic record, and theatre documentation. You are the anaesthetic/recovery nurse responsible for counting, documentation, and escalation.
Assessment Instructions
Prepare a written report (3000 words) that critically analyses:
Part A — Situation Description & Risk Appraisal (800–900 words)
1. Clinical Context: Briefly outline the perioperative pathway for elective inguinal hernia repair with mesh (pre-op, intra-op, PACU).
2. S8 Controlled Drug Framework: Define S8 drugs and summarise their legal, ethical, and professional handling requirements in perioperative settings.
3. Incident Summary: Describe the incorrect S8 count and missing ampoules, the discovery point, potential causes (human factors, documentation gaps, storage/security), and risk of harm (patient safety, staff accountability, organisational compliance).
4. Impact Analysis: Discuss immediate and downstream implications—clinical safety (diversion risk, misadministration), legal/regulatory exposure, reputational risk, and staff wellbeing (psychological safety).
Focus: Demonstrate situational awareness, systems thinking, and risk identification in anaesthetic/PACU practice.
Part B — Management of the Situation (1200–1400 words)
Develop a stepwise management plan that is lawful, professional, and pragmatic:
Immediate Actions:
· Secure remaining S8 stock (lockable storage; limit access).
· Notify/escalate: anaesthetist, senior perioperative nurse/NUM, theatre manager, pharmacy, and governance as per policy.
· Reconciliation: recheck the controlled drug register, anaesthetic chart, perioperative record, PACU documentation; verify wastage entries and witness signatures.
· Search: anaesthetic trolley drawers, sharps bin, clinical waste, PACU bedspace, prep room, and transfer pathway.
· Documentation: complete incident report, contemporaneous notes, chain-of-custody entries, time stamps, and people involved.
· Patient Safety: verify drug administrations to patient(s), monitor for adverse events, and confirm alternative analgesia stock and availability.
Legal/Ethical/Policy Alignment:
· Outline relevant legislation and standards (e.g., state/territory Poisons/Medicines Regulations, organizational medicines policy, ACORN Standards, controlled drug register requirements, audit trails).
· Emphasize the duty of candour, accountability, and a non-punitive, just culture to enable transparent reporting and learning.
Investigation & Root Cause Analysis:
· Use a human factors lens (distraction, interruptions, shift handover, concurrent tasks, unfamiliar locum processes).
· Explore system contributors: workflow design, storage layout, stock reconciliation process, documentation tools, roster patterns.
· Recommend appropriate RCA methodology (e.g., fishbone/Ishikawa) and data sources (audit logs, CCTV if applicable, time-motion studies).
Communication & Team Processes:
· Structure briefing/debriefing (who, what, when), including pharmacy and governance updates.
· Manage staff wellbeing, psychological safety, and clear messaging to prevent rumors while ensuring transparency.
Follow-up Actions:
· Temporary increased supervision or double-check audits; stock reissue protocols; education refreshers; schedule policy review.
Focus: Demonstrate the ability to operationalize an incident response within anaesthetic and PACU environments, ensuring patient safety, regulatory compliance, and team integrity.
Part C — Professional Techniques to Reduce Drug Count Errors (700–800 words)
Critically evaluate evidence-based strategies to prevent S8 discrepancies in anaesthetic and recovery settings:
Process Controls & Verification:
· Two-person checks at receipt, administration, wastage, end-of-case, and end-of-list reconciliation.
· Real-time documentation (immediate register entry; no retrospective bulk entries).
· Witnessed wastage with documented volumes and signatures; distinct labelled syringes; no unattended S8s.
Secure Storage & Access Control:
· Lockable storage, controlled key/card access, limited authorized users, no open benches for S8 handling.
· Clear chain-of-custody protocols; separation from S4/S3; dedicated S8 tray.
Standardization & Human Factors:
· Checklists, bundles, and closed-loop communication during counts (reduce interruption and noise, “sterile cockpit” during critical periods).
· Visual management (count boards, stock maps), barcode/scan systems if available, and standard anaesthetic trolley layout.
· Handover discipline (SBAR for drugs), and explicit count reconciliation during handovers and meal breaks.
Digital & Audit Supports:
· Electronic CD (controlled drug) register; time-stamped entries, discrepancy alerts, and audit trails.
· Routine audits, spot checks, and feedback loops to track trends and improve compliance.
Education, Competency & Culture:
· Annual competency validation for S8 handling; simulation of count processes and incident drills.
· Just culture: encourage speaking up, psychological safety, and non-punitive reporting to surface near-misses.
The post Mr. James Carter, 54-year-old male (ASA II, BMI 29), undergoes elective open right inguinal hernia repair with synthetic polypropylene mesh under general anaesthesia with ETT first appeared on Writeden.