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Background: Accuracy is needed with medication administration, a skill that involves rule-based habits and clinical reasoning. This pilot study investigated the use of an evidence-based checklist for accuracy with oral medication administration and error reporting among prelicensure nursing students. Checklist items were anchored in the mnemonic C-MATCH-REASON © (Client, Medication, ADRs, Time, Client History, Route, Expiration date, Amount, Site, Outcomes, Notation). Method: Nineteen participants randomly assigned to crossover sequence AB or BA (A: checklist; B: no checklist) practiced simulation scenarios with embedded errors. Nursing faculty used an observation form to track error data. Results: Using the C-MATCH-REASON © checklist compared with not using the checklist supported rule adherence ( p = .005), knowledge-based error reduction ( p = .011), and total error reduction ( p = .010). The null hypothesis was not rejected for errors found ( p = .061) nor reported ( p = .144), possibly due to sample size. Conclusion: C-MATCH-REASON© was effective for error reduction. Study replication with a larger sample is warranted. J Nurs Educ . 2024;63(5):320–327.
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Agoglia et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6c5deb6db643587644b75 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3928/01484834-20240305-07
Mary Agoglia
Kathleen Kelly
Glenda Kelman
Journal of Nursing Education
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