Authors

  1. Johnson, Maree PhD, RN
  2. Weidemann, Gabrielle PhD
  3. Adams, Rebecca BSc (Hons)
  4. Manias, Elizabeth PhD, RN
  5. Levett-Jones, Tracy PhD, RN
  6. Aguilar, Vicki MHlthSc(ed), RN
  7. Everett, Bronwyn PhD, RN

Abstract

The aim of this qualitative study was to examine the nature of interruptions during medication administration. Focus groups were conducted with medical/surgical nurses (n = 15), critical care nurses (n = 13), and nurse managers/educators/specialists (n = 6). Most interruptions (78%) were predictable. Nurse-adopted strategies included blocking, engaging, mediating, multitasking, and preventing. Educational content was developed that relates behavioral strategies to respond to predictable and unpredictable interruptions.