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The following examples from each harm category demonstrate how this categorization is applied and when an event reaches a patient.

Harm Category

Examples

Did not reach patient

A - Unsafe condition

In passing a shelf of medications, a pharmacist notices similarity between two medication names and thinks, “Someone could be confused; we should change this.”

B - Near miss

A pharmacist reaches for a medication but incorrectly retrieves a similarly named medication right next to it. The pharmacist notices immediately, replaces the incorrect bottle, and selects the correct one.

Did reach patient, did not harm patient

C - No harm, no change in care

The patient is handed incorrect medication and says to the nurse, “These aren’t my pills.”

D - No harm, but required extra monitoring or an intervention to preclude harm

The patient is handed a dose of incorrect medication and takes it. The nurse realizes the medication was incorrect. The patient spends extra time in the hospital to make sure there are no ill effects.

Did reach patient, resulted in harm

E - Temporary harm, no significant intervention

The patient is administered incorrect medication and experiences nausea and vomiting. The patient receives extra monitoring, but their hospital stay is not extended.

F - Temporary harm, significant intervention needed

The patient is administered incorrect medication and experiences nausea and vomiting. A rescue medication is administered.

G - Permanent harm

The patient is administered incorrect medication and experiences a seizure. The patient suffers permanent brain damage as a result.

H - Required an intervention necessary to sustain life

The patient is administered incorrect medication and goes into cardiac arrest. The patient receives CPR and is defibrillated.

I - Death

The patient is administered incorrect medication which ultimately results in the patient’s death.

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