Jun 05, 2020

Coroner could not determine if medication error caused elderly woman’s death

The ACT Coroner says he was not able to determine if a medication mix up contributed to the death of an elderly woman in 2016.

Viola Clarke died on 20 February 2016, with the cause of death recorded as aspiration pneumonia.

But two days later, Dr Carolyn Droste referred the case to the coroner, following an allegation that two weeks prior Ms Clarke had been given the wrong medication at the nursing home where she lived, and the medication may have “caused or contributed” to her death.

Medication given to the wrong resident

On 9 February 2016, Ms Clarke was given the wrong medication. But Coroner James Lawton noted the error was “immediately detected” and the proper protocols were put in place: Ms Clarke’s family, her GP and other medical authorities were notified to “deal with the consequences”.

An ambulance was called that night, but Ms Clarke appeared well and was not taken to hospital.

But her condition “worsened” overnight, according to the coroner, and on 10 February Ms Clarke was taken to Canberra Hospital.

As well as experiencing the effects of the medication error, Ms Clarke was also suffering from congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, acute on chronic renal failure, gastric reflux, and dysphagia.

Ms Clarke passed away on 20 February.

Coroner unable to determine aspiration timing

The coroner was not able to determine if the medication contributed to Ms Clarke contracting aspiration pneumonia.

“It was possible that she aspirated before being given the wrong medication; after being given the wrong medication but before being admitted to the Canberra Hospital; or after she was admitted to the Canberra Hospital,” the coroner said in his findings.

“Ultimately I am unable to be comfortably satisfied that the erroneously-given medication caused or contributed to the aspiration that led to Mrs Clarke developing aspiration pneumonia as I cannot be comfortably satisfied as to when that aspiration (or aspirations) occurred,” he said.

Aged care nursing careers should be promoted, coroner said

Coroner Lawton said Australia’s aged care system will need to “consistently expand” to meet the increased burden placed on it from the ageing population.

In his recommendations, he said the aged care industry should be promoted as an attractive option for graduate nurses.

He said aged care facilities should be given support to conduct graduate programs for nurses allowing them to attain a speciality in geriatric care.

He said endorsed enrolled nurses should be given increased “scope of practice” in their roles.

Confirm resident’s identity before administering medication

Medication has long been described as a ‘wicked’ problem in aged care. 

Between January and March 2020, the Aged Care Quality and Safety Commission received 203 complaints about ‘medication management’, the largest total equal with ‘personnel numbers/sufficiency’.

This case highlights the importance of staff training and protocols around the administering of medication in protecting the recipients of aged care services.

Though in this case the coroner could find no direct link between the medication error and Ms Clarke’s passing away, medication errors can, and do at times, have the most serious of consequences. 

Image: Moussa81, iStock.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Western Australia makes voluntary assisted dying legal

  Western Australia has become the second state in Australia to make voluntary assisted dying (VAD) legal, after passing historic new laws in parliament on Tuesday. The heavily amended Bill makes Western Australia only the 19th jurisdiction in the world to support assisted dying. “The Voluntary Assisted Dying Bill 2019 has cleared its final hurdle... Read More

What Aged Care Could Learn from the Travel Industry

The airlines that are most customer focussed are the ones that earn more than two times the industry average. And as a dollar value that’s a huge amount of profit. So what can the aged care sector learn about customer service from here? What many organisations may not realise is that customer experience is primarily... Read More

The Aged Care Act’s ‘Improved rights’ are a myth to deflect from crushing fees

Two weeks after the new Aged Care Act took effect, seniors are asking: what rights have actually improved? The answer is almost none, while new co-payments and soaring fees are forcing families into financial hardship. Read More
Advertisement
Exit mobile version