Analysis of incidents associated with intravenous potassium chloride have led patient safety organisations in the USA, Canada, the UK and Australia to recommend a simple way to prevent these tragic deaths - 'replace concentrated ampoules with large-volume premixed solutions in general ward areas in acute care facilities'.4
In areas where ampoules of concentrated solution need to be retained, it is recommended that they are stored separately and are readily identifiable from preparations with similar packaging. Overseas and in Australia, manufacturers are taking steps to reduce the problem by colour-coding and/or changing the shape of potassium chloride ampoules.
The Australian Council for Safety and Quality in Health Care has issued a high-risk medication alert for intravenous potassium chloride (see box for recommendations).5 The alert covers prescribing, storage, preparation and administration of intravenous potassium chloride. The alert, and tools to action the recommendations in the alert, is available at www.safetyandquality.org
Recommendations from Safety and Quality Council medication alert: intravenous potassium chloride can be fatal if given inappropriately5
|
1. REMOVE AMPOULES OF POTASSIUM CHLORIDE FROM WARD STOCK AND REPLACE WITH PREMIXED SOLUTIONS.
Due to the risk associated with intravenous potassium chloride, ampoules of potassium chloride SHOULD NOT be kept as a stock item in wards.
2. In critical areas where high concentrations and doses of potassium chloride are necessary, do a risk assessment to determine whether it is appropriate to keep the ampoules as a stock item and develop a protocol for safe preparation and use.
3. Assess the storage of potassium chloride ampoules and premixed solutions to ensure they are stored separately and are readily identifiable from preparations with similar packaging.
The recommendations also apply to ampoules of potassium phosphate or other concentrated potassium salts.
|