Medication order

Cards (16)

  • Stat Order
    Medication is to be given immediately and only once
  • Single Order
    Medication to be given once at a specified time
  • Standing Order
    May or may not have a termination date, can be carried out indefinitely or for a specified number of days
  • PRN Order
    As-needed order, permits the nurse to give a medication when the client requires it
  • Types of Medication Order
    • Stat Order
    • Single Order
    • Standing Order
    • PRN Order
  • Client's Full Name
    The first and last names and middle initials or names should always be used to avoid confusion between two clients who have the same last name
  • Date and time the order is written
    Writing the time of day on the order can eliminate errors when the nursing shifts change and makes clear when certain orders automatically terminate
  • Name of the drug to be administered
    In some settings only generic names are permitted; however, trade names are widely used in hospitals and health agencies
  • Dosage of the drug
    Includes the amount of the drug to be administered
  • Frequency of administration

    How many times the drug is to be administered
  • Route of Administration
    The manner by which the drug is to be administered
  • Signature of the ordering physician
    An unsigned order has no validity, and the ordering physician or nurse practitioner needs to be notified if the order is unsigned
  • Example
    • Tetracycline 250 mg (amount) four times a day (frequency); potassium chloride 10% (strength) 5 mL (amount) three times a day with meals (time and frequency)
  • Communicating a Medication Order
    1. Drug order is written on the client's chart by a primary care provider or by a nurse receiving a telephone or verbal order
    2. Most acute care agencies have a specified time frame in which the primary care provider issuing the telephone or verbal order must cosign the order written by the nurse
    3. The nurse or clerk then copies the medication order to a Kardex or medication administration record (MAR)
  • MARs vary in form, but all include the client's name, drug name and dose; and times and method of administration
  • The nurse should always question the primary care provider about any order that is ambiguous, unusual (e.g., an abnormally high dosage of a medication), or contraindicated by the client's condition