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Chart — IV Therapy

Medication Administration Rights

The 8 rights of medication administration — purpose, verification method, and nursing action for each right. Verified before every medication administration.

Educational use only. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

The 8 Rights — Quick Reference

#RightPurposeVerification Method
1Right PatientEnsure the medication reaches the intended patientUse two patient identifiers: name AND date of birth or medical record number.
2Right MedicationConfirm the drug dispensed matches the drug orderedThree-point label check: at retrieval from Pyxis, during preparation, and immediately before administration.
3Right DoseGive neither too much nor too littleCalculate dose from the order; verify against pharmacy label.
4Right RouteThe ordered route determines absorption and safetyConfirm the route on the order, MAR, and medication label match.
5Right TimeTiming ensures therapeutic drug levels and avoids interactionsAdminister within the facility-defined window (commonly ±30 minutes for scheduled, ±60 minutes for once-daily).
6Right DocumentationAccurate records protect the patient, the nurse, and the interprofessional teamDocument in the MAR immediately after administration — not before.
7Right ReasonUnderstanding the indication verifies the order makes clinical sense and allows the nurse to educate the patient and monitor for therapeutic effectKnow the indication for every medication you administer.
8Right ResponseCompleting the administration loopReassess at an appropriate interval for therapeutic effect and adverse effects.

Right-by-Right Detail

1

Right Patient

Ensure the medication reaches the intended patient — wrong-patient errors are among the most preventable and most consequential

Verification

Use two patient identifiers: name AND date of birth or medical record number. Scan barcode or check armband. Never rely on room number or verbal confirmation alone.

Nursing Action

Before any medication: check the armband against the MAR. Scan barcode (BCMA). Ask the patient to state their name and DOB if they are able.

Red Flag: Patient states "I don't take that" or ID bracelet is missing

2

Right Medication

Confirm the drug dispensed matches the drug ordered — LASA (look-alike/sound-alike) errors are a leading cause of harm

Verification

Three-point label check: at retrieval from Pyxis, during preparation, and immediately before administration. Read the full drug name — not just the first few letters.

Nursing Action

Compare label name to MAR all three times. Know common LASA pairs: hydrALAZINE vs hydrOXYzine, HumuLIN vs HumaLOG, cefazolin vs cefTRIAXone.

Red Flag: Label looks different from expected; patient questions the drug identity

3

Right Dose

Give neither too much nor too little — dose errors include 10× doses (decimal placement) and incorrect weight-based calculation

Verification

Calculate dose from the order; verify against pharmacy label. For weight-based drugs: confirm current weight in kg. For high-alert medications: obtain independent double-check from a second nurse.

Nursing Action

Recalculate doses before drawing up. Double-check pumps for weight-based infusions. Never estimate — calculate. Question doses that seem abnormally high or low.

Red Flag: Calculated dose is >2× or <½ the typical range for this patient's weight

4

Right Route

The ordered route determines absorption and safety — wrong route errors can be fatal (e.g., IV vincristine is lethal; it must be given intrathecally only)

Verification

Confirm the route on the order, MAR, and medication label match. Assess patient ability to tolerate the route — e.g., PO medications require the patient to swallow safely.

Nursing Action

Verify route at each check. For injections: confirm SC vs IM vs IV. Never administer intrathecal medications without explicit training, order, and safety protocols.

Red Flag: Oral medication for NPO patient; IV medication without IV access; unfamiliar route for this drug

5

Right Time

Timing ensures therapeutic drug levels and avoids interactions — some drugs require strict timing (anticoagulants, insulin, antibiotics for peak/trough levels)

Verification

Administer within the facility-defined window (commonly ±30 minutes for scheduled, ±60 minutes for once-daily). STAT orders take priority over scheduled medications.

Nursing Action

Check MAR for last dose and next scheduled time before giving. Document actual time of administration. Know which medications have strict timing (levothyroxine AC, bisphosphonates — 30 min before eating, warfarin — consistent daily time).

Red Flag: Missed previous dose; unclear if dose was given; patient says they already received the medication

6

Right Documentation

Accurate records protect the patient, the nurse, and the interprofessional team — it is the legal record of care given

Verification

Document in the MAR immediately after administration — not before. Include actual time, site (for injectables), any relevant assessment data, and patient response.

Nursing Action

Never chart for a medication you did not personally give. If a medication is held, refused, or not given: document the reason, whether the provider was notified, and the plan.

Red Flag: MAR shows a medication was given that you cannot verify; previous nurse charted without giving

7

Right Reason

Understanding the indication verifies the order makes clinical sense and allows the nurse to educate the patient and monitor for therapeutic effect

Verification

Know the indication for every medication you administer. If the indication does not match the patient's diagnosis or condition — hold and clarify before giving.

Nursing Action

Ask yourself: 'Why is this patient receiving this medication?' If you cannot answer, look it up or call the provider before giving. Question orders that seem inconsistent with the clinical picture.

Red Flag: Unfamiliar medication; new medication without a clear indication; patient has no diagnosis supporting this drug

8

Right Response

Completing the administration loop — verify the drug did what it was supposed to do and did not cause harm

Verification

Reassess at an appropriate interval for therapeutic effect and adverse effects. Document the assessment and patient response in the medical record.

Nursing Action

Set a reminder to reassess: analgesics in 30–60 min, antihypertensives in 30–60 min after IV dose, antibiotics for anaphylaxis in the first 15–30 min of each new drug. If expected response is absent, notify provider.

Red Flag: No expected therapeutic effect; new symptoms developing after medication administration

Common Medication Errors and Prevention

Error TypePrevention Strategy
Wrong patientTwo identifiers + BCMA every time, no exceptions
LASA drug confusionRead full label name; use tall-man lettering; never abbreviate drug names
10× dose (decimal error)Write 0.5 mg (not .5 mg); independent double-check for high-alert drugs
Pump programming errorUse smart pump drug library; independent double-check before starting infusion
Missed allergy checkReview allergy list before every new medication; allergy band on patient at all times
Charting before givingDocument AFTER administration — never pre-chart
Interruption during preparationNo-interruption zone during medication prep; vest/badge indicating medication pass in progress
Verbal order misinterpretationRead-back to prescriber; repeat back order verbatim + receive confirmation

High-Alert Medication Double-Check Requirements

Medication ClassExamplesDouble-Check Elements
InsulinRegular, lispro, glargine, NPHType, dose, blood glucose value, route, patient ID
AnticoagulantsHeparin infusion, warfarin, enoxaparinDose against weight or lab value; infusion rate; last INR/aPTT/anti-Xa
OpioidsMorphine, hydromorphone, fentanyl PCADrug, concentration, dose, lockout interval, 4-hour limit (PCA); baseline RR and sedation
VasopressorsNorepinephrine, dopamine, epinephrineConcentration, dose in mcg/kg/min, rate in mL/hr; confirm central access
Concentrated electrolytesKCl >10 mEq/hr IV, 3% NaClDose, rate, dilution, route (central required for high-concentration)
Neuromuscular blockersSuccinylcholine, rocuroniumVentilatory support available; separate storage confirmed; not confused with analgesics

NCLEX Pearls

  • Document AFTER giving medication — never before. Pre-charting is unsafe and falsification of medical records.
  • Two patient identifiers are REQUIRED before every medication — name + DOB or MRN. Room number alone is NOT an identifier.
  • The most important pre-medication action: check the patient's allergy status.
  • For high-alert medications (insulin, heparin, opioids): independent double-check = two nurses verify separately and independently before administration.
  • Never give a medication prepared by another nurse — you are legally responsible for what you administer.
  • Questioning an order is a nursing responsibility — if a dose seems unsafe or illogical, clarify before giving.
  • The 8 rights are verified every time — not skipped for familiar patients or routine medications.

Related Resources

Data source: ISMP Medication Safety Guidelines / Joint Commission NPSG / Evidence-Based Nursing Practice

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with ISMP Medication Safety Guidelines / Joint Commission NPSG / Evidence-Based Nursing Practice. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →