Specialized Infusion Safety (PCA and Epidural)

Key Points

  • PCA and epidural infusions are high-risk therapies that require strict order verification and continuous monitoring.
  • For PCA demand dosing, only the patient presses the demand button to reduce oversedation risk.
  • Epidural block progression above T4 or respiratory decline requires immediate escalation and infusion reassessment.

Equipment

  • Programmed PCA or epidural pump with locked settings per policy
  • Dedicated tubing/connectors to prevent wrong-route medication administration
  • Continuous monitoring tools (pulse oximetry, end-tidal CO2 when ordered, and frequent vital-sign workflow)

Procedure Steps

  1. Verify complete provider order and perform independent double-check (drug, concentration, dose settings, lockout interval, and maximum limits) before initiation.
  2. Confirm patient appropriateness for PCA self-dosing and teach that only the patient activates demand dosing.
  3. Start infusion with policy-based setup, secure dedicated line routing, and avoid incompatible bolus administration through dedicated lines.
  4. Monitor pain response, sedation level, respiratory status, oxygenation, hemodynamics, and demand-versus-delivered dose trends.
  5. For epidural care, track motor/sensory status and block level progression from documented baseline.
  6. Trigger emergency actions immediately for deterioration: stop infusion when indicated, provide oxygen/airway support, and notify anesthesia/provider per protocol.

Common Errors

  • Family-activated PCA dosing or incorrect programming high risk for opioid oversedation and respiratory depression
  • Reconnecting disconnected epidural tubing or delayed response to rising block/respiratory change severe neurologic or cardiopulmonary harm