Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Application of Change Theory to the Problem of IntravenousMedication Overdose. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 10 page report discusses the need for
change in a clinical setting regarding intravenous medication
overdoses. When a patient is admitted to the hospital and is
receiving intravenous drugs, it is clear that he or she is
already in a relatively fragile state. To obtain the overall
incidence of overdose of intravenously administered medications,
it will be necessary to combine the incidence of overdoses
occurring while in the hospital plus the incidence of symptoms
and/or disease that would have initially required use of the
medication. A literature review of the problem is presented as
well as a recommendation for instituting a computer-based order
system for medications. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BWivover.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Ironically, it can also take place in what is ostensibly most safe environment for the delivery of intravenous drugs -- the clinical setting of a modern hospital. The
student working on this project should understand that horror stories such as what happened to award-winning journalist Betsy Lehman have are always reasons to make both medical care providers and
the general public worry about their safety and the drugs they are given while in the hospital. Lehman was a patient at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in 1995, one of
the worlds leading hospitals in the field. She died as the result of being given four times the normal dose of the cancer drug cyclophosphamide. To make matters worse, another
Dana-Farber patient received the same overdose two days before. The Problem For the purposes of this research, intravenous medication overdose in a medium-sized hospital setting is considered and addressed.
When a patient is admitted to the hospital and is receiving intravenous drugs, it is clear that he or she is already in a relatively fragile state. The
student researching this should consider that in order to obtain the overall incidence of overdose of intravenously administered medications, it will be necessary to combine the incidence of overdoses occurring
while in the hospital plus the incidence of symptoms and/or disease that would have initially required use of the medication. In order to assure that only the incidence of
IV overdose of legitimate medication is addressed, it will be important to discount errors in drug administration, noncompliance, drug abuse, therapeutic failures, and possible adverse drug reactions (ADRs). According to
Lazarou, Pomeranz, and Corey (1998), the incidence of serious and fatal drug reactions in U.S. hospitals is extremely high. It would certainly appear that appropriate drug dosage, as well as
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