This presentation discusses the clinical errors that may occur in the treatment of Druhi Neupane due to language barrier and provides strategies to prevent them. The errors include medical reconciliation error, unsafe discharge, and informed consent error.
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Identification of the patient Druhi Neupane is a 48 year old patient who is likely to be at a risk of clinical errors because of language barrier. The fact that Druhi, her family members and regular visitors speak minimal English makes communication with the nurse difficult. This is posing a risk to the health and well-being of Druhi because there is high chances of misunderstandings and misinterpretations. Language barrier will therefore affect the quality of care offered to Druhi. Clinical errors Medical reconciliation error-This is a shared responsibility between the nurse and the patient and families. The patients are the central resource of communicating their personal medication taking practices. Druhi is at risk of medical reconciliation error because she may not bee able to give detailed explanation about her medical history (Verghese, Charlton, Kassirer, Ramsey, and Ioannidis 2015). The consequences of this error are omissions, drug interactions, duplications and dosing errors. Clinical errors Unsafe discharge-Druhi may be discharged before she is clinically ready to leave the hospital. Due to language barrier, she may not be properly assessed. The consequences of unsafe discharge include patient mortality, morbidity or readmissions. Informed consent error- nurses are required to disclose risks, benefits and alternatives of treatment to patients. However, due to language barrier, Druhi may agree to treatment that may affect her wellbeing or refuse to take essential treatments. The nurse may also make judgements without her consultation. The consequences of informed consent error include wrong prescriptions, allergic reactions, and the nurse may be charged with malpractice.Fig 1: (Neira 2018) Fig 2: (White 2016) Strategies 1.Collaborate with other healthcare practitioners 2.Request the hospital to get a reliable interpreter (Latimer, Hewitt, Stanbrough, and McAndrew, 2017) 3.Seek more clarification on what is not clear or well understood 4.Seek informed consent from the patient and family members Clinical Errors inDruhi Neupane’s treatment Author’s Name List of References Latimer, S., Hewitt, J., Stanbrough, R. and McAndrew, R., 2017. Reducing medication errors: Teaching strategies that increase nursing students' awareness of medication errors and their prevention. Neira, L., 2018. The importance of addressing language barriers in the us health system: Duke center for personalized healthcare. Retrieved from https://dukepersonalizedhealth.org/2018/07/the-importance-of-addressing-language-barriers-in-the-us-health-system/ Verghese, A., Charlton, B., Kassirer, J.P., Ramsey, M. and Ioannidis, J.P., 2015. Inadequacies of physical examination as a cause of medical errors and adverse events: a collection of vignettes.The American journal of medicine,128(12), pp.1322-1324. White, J., 2016. 5 strategies for hospitals to prevent medical errors: healthcare business & technology. Retrieved fromhttp://www.healthcarebusinesstech.com/medical-error-prevent/