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Introduction

Practitioners may prescribe eyedrops for a variety of diagnostic and therapeutic purposes, including dilating the pupil, staining the cornea to detect abrasions or scars, anesthetizing or lubricating the eye, and treating such disorders as glaucoma and infection.1 An ointment preparation helps keep eye medication in contact with the treatment area of the eye for as long as possible. Eye ointments treat eye diseases, prevent or treat infection or inflammation, relieve discomfort, provide lubrication, and prevent damage.2,3

Understanding the ocular effects of medications is important, because certain drugs can cause eye disorders or have serious ocular effects. For example, anticholinergics, which are commonly used during eye examinations, can precipitate acute glaucoma in patients with a predisposition to the disorder.4

Equipment

Equipment

Prescribed eye medication (drops or ointment) • gloves • warm water or normal saline solution • gauze pads • facial tissues • Optional: ocular dressing, personal protective equipment.

Preparation of Equipment

Preparation of equipment

Inspect all equipment and supplies. If a product is expired, is defective, or has compromised integrity, remove it from patient use, label it as expired or defective, and report the expiration or defect, as directed by your facility. Make sure the medication is labeled for ophthalmic use. Date the medication container the first time you open it, because you should use the medication within the time specified by the manufacturer once you’ve opened the container to prevent contamination.5,6 Follow your facility’s direction or the manufacturer’s instructions on when to discard an opened eye medication. If the tip of an eye ointment tube has crusted, turn the tip on a sterile gauze pad to remove the crust.

Implementation

Implementation
  • Avoid distractions and interruptions when preparing and administering the medication to prevent medication administration errors.7,8
  • Verify the practitioner’s order.9,10,11,12
  • Reconcile the patient’s medications when a new medication is ordered by the practitioner to reduce the risk of medication errors, including omissions, duplications, dosing errors, and drug interactions.13,14
  • Gather and prepare the necessary equipment and supplies.
  • Compare the medication label to the order in the patient’s medical record.9,10,11,12 Confirm which eye requires treatment.

NURSING ALERT Make sure you know which eye to treat, because the practitioner may order different medications and doses for each eye.

  • Check the patient’s medical record for an allergy or other contraindication to the prescribed medication. If an allergy or contraindications exist, don’t administer the medication, and notify the practitioner.9,10,11,12
  • Check the expiration date. If the medication is expired, return it to the pharmacy and obtain new medication.9,10,11,12
  • Visually inspect the medication for discoloration or any other loss of integrity. Don’t give the medication if its integrity is compromised.9,10,11,12
  • Discuss any unresolved concerns about the medication with the patient’s practitioner.9,10,11,12
  • Warm the medication to room temperature, as necessary.
  • Perform hand hygiene.15,16,17,18,19,20
  • Confirm the patient’s identify using at least two patient identifiers.21
  • Provide privacy.22,23,24,25
  • Explain the procedure to the patient and family (if appropriate) according to their individual communication and learning needs to increase their understanding, allay their fears, and enhance cooperation.26
  • If the patient is receiving the medication for the first time, inform the patient or family about possible significant adverse reactions, and discuss any other concerns related to the medication.9,10,11,12
  • Verify that you’re administering the medication at the proper time, in the prescribed dosage, and by the correct route to reduce the risk of medication errors.9,10,11,12
  • If your facility uses a bar-code technology, use it, as directed by your facility.
  • Raise the patient’s bed to waist level before providing care to prevent caregiver back strain.27
  • Have the patient sit or lie in the supine position.
  • Perform hand hygiene.15,16,17,18,19,20

NURSING ALERT If your facility’s hazardous drug list contains the drug you are about to administer, put on personal protective equipment, as directed.28

  • Put on gloves to comply with standard precautions.29,30,31
  • If the patient is wearing an eye dressing, remove it by gently pulling it down and away from the patient’s forehead to prevent skin shearing or tearing.32 Take care not to contaminate your hands.
  • Perform hand hygiene15,16,17,18,19,20 and then put on gloves.26,27
  • Assess the patient’s eye, noting any redness, edema, or discharge; note the appearance and amount of discharge.
  • Remove any discharge by cleaning around the eye with gauze pads moistened with warm water or normal saline solution. With the patient’s eye closed, clean from the inner to the outer canthus, using a fresh sterile gauze pad for each stroke.
  • To remove crusted secretions around the eye, moisten a gauze pad with warm water or normal saline solution. Ask the patient to close the eye, and then place the gauze pad over it for 1 or 2 minutes. Remove the pad, and then repeat with new moist sterile gauze pads, as necessary, until the secretions are soft enough to be removed without traumatizing the mucosa.
  • Remove and discard your gloves.31
  • Perform hand hygiene.15,16,17,18,19,20
  • Put on new gloves.29,31
  • Instruct the patient to tilt the head back and toward the side of the affected eye so that excess medication can flow away from the tear duct, minimizing systemic absorption through the nasal mucosa.

For Eyedrops

  • Remove the bottle top from the medication container and place it on a clean, dry surface. Be careful to avoid contaminating the dropper tip or bottle top.
  • Before instilling the eyedrops, instruct the patient to look up and away. This position moves the cornea away from the lower lid and minimizes the risk of touching the cornea with the dropper if the patient blinks.
  • If necessary, steady the hand holding the dropper by resting it against the patient’s forehead.1 With your other hand, gently pull down the lower lid of the affected eye and instill the drops in the conjunctival sac. Try to avoid placing the drops directly on the eyeball to prevent the patient from experiencing discomfort. (See Instilling eyedrops.)
  • After instilling the eyedrops, instruct the patient to close both eyes gently, without squeezing the lids shut.
  • To prevent systemic absorption of medication, gently press your thumb on the inner canthus for 2 to 3 minutes while the patient closes both eyes.32
  • Use a clean tissue to remove any excess solution leaking from the eye. Remember to use a fresh tissue for each eye to prevent cross-contamination.

For Eye Ointment

  • Squeeze a small ribbon of medication on the edge of the conjunctival sac from the inner to the outer canthus.3 If necessary, steady the hand holding the medication tube by bracing it against the patient’s forehead or cheek, taking care not to touch the tip of the tube to the eye or other surface. Cut off the ribbon by turning the tube.
  • Tell the patient that eye ointment may cause momentary blurring of the vision.2

For All Eye Medication

  • Instruct the patient to close the eyes gently without squeezing the lids shut and to roll the eyes behind the closed lids to help distribute the medication over the surface of the eyeball.
  • Use a clean tissue to remove any excess solution or ointment leaking from the eye. Remember to use a fresh tissue for each eye to prevent cross-contamination.
  • Replace the medication cap.
  • Apply a new ocular dressing, if necessary.
  • Return the bed to the lowest position to prevent falls and maintain patient safety.33
  • Return the medication to the storage area. Make sure to store it according to the label’s instructions.
  • Remove and discard your gloves.31
  • Perform hand hygiene.15,16,17,18,19,20
  • Document the procedure.34,35,36,37

Special Considerations

Special considerations
  • Never touch the tip of the bottle or dropper or the tip of the tube to the patient’s eyeball, lids, or lashes to maintain the drug container’s sterility.1 If the dropper tip becomes contaminated, discard the medication and obtain another sterile medication bottle.
  • Don’t use eye medication for more than one patient, if possible, to prevent cross-contamination; however, if permitted by your facility, you may use preserved multidose eyedrop medications in multiple patients with special infection prevention and patient safety precautions.38

NURSING ALERT Don’t use multidose eyedrops for a patient when you’ve used them to treat another infectious or immunocompromised patient. 38

NURSING ALERT Discard eyedrops immediately if contamination occurs-for example, if the dropper tip touches any part of the eye structure or surface, a staff member administering the medication touches the dropper tip, an open eyedrop container has no expiration date on it, an open eyedrop container has an expiration date that exceeds 28 days, or an eyedrop container is uncapped.38

NURSING ALERT To prevent cross-contamination, never use a container of eye medication for more than one patient.2

  • If you’re administering eyedrops and an eye ointment, administer the drops first, because the ointment may inhibit the action of the eyedrops.2 Wait times between applications vary; follow the manufacturer’s prescribing information.39
  • Treat only the affected eye, unless otherwise ordered.2

Patient Teaching

Patient teaching

If the practitioner has ordered eye medication for home use, teach the patient and family (if appropriate) proper administration technique. Review the procedure, and ask for a return demonstration. Ensure that the patient has refrigeration to store the medication, if necessary . Instruct the patient to contact the practitioner if the desired medication effects don’t occur within an indicated time frame, or if eye irritation or changes in vision develop. Remind the patient and family (if appropriate) not to share ophthalmic medications to prevent cross-contamination, and teach them about the importance of hand washing before and after administration.

Complications

Complications

Instillation of some eye medications may cause transient burning, itching, and redness. Rarely, systemic effects may occur.

Documentation

Documentation

Document your assessment of the eye. Record the medication you administered, eye or eyes you treated, and date, time, and dose, according to your facility’s documentation format. Note the patient’s response to the procedure. Document any adverse effects that occur, the date and time you notified the practitioner, prescribed interventions, and the patient’s response to those interventions. Document teaching you provided to the patient and family (if appropriate), their understanding of that teaching, and any need for follow-up teaching.

References

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