Graduation Date

Summer 8-8-2025

Submission Type

Dissertation/Thesis

Degree Name

Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP)

Department

Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Program

School

School of Nursing

Faculty Mentor

Yvonne Weideman

Committee Member

Suzanne Bowser

Keywords

barcode medication administration, program evaluation, adverse drug events

Abstract

The barcode medication administration (BCMA) process is complex. When a step is omitted or altered, the risk of a medication error reaching the patient increases, which subsequently increases the chance of the patient experiencing an adverse drug event. A BCMA program evaluation was implemented to address questions related to policy and practice. Dr. Harrington's BCMA checklist provided the framework for the assessment. The Medication Administration System—Nurses Assessment of Satisfaction (MAS-NAS) scale, developed by Hurley et al. (2006), and the BCMA perceived usefulness scale, adopted by Darawad et al. (2019), measured nurses' perception of the program, including technology integration and ease of use. Medication observation was conducted using the LeapFrog Medication Administration Tool, commonly used as a regulatory compliance measure. The survey information, revised checklist, and observations were analyzed, and shortcomings and strengths were reported to nursing leadership.

Included in

Nursing Commons

COinS