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
Prescribed eye medication (drops or ointment) gloves warm water or normal saline solution gauze pads facial tissues Optional: ocular dressing, personal protective 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 youve opened the container to prevent contamination.5,6 Follow your facilitys direction or the manufacturers 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.
NURSING ALERT Make sure you know which eye to treat, because the practitioner may order different medications and doses for each eye.
NURSING ALERT If your facilitys hazardous drug list contains the drug you are about to administer, put on personal protective equipment, as directed.28
For Eyedrops
For Eye Ointment
For All Eye Medication
NURSING ALERT Dont use multidose eyedrops for a patient when youve 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 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 dont 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.
Instillation of some eye medications may cause transient burning, itching, and redness. Rarely, systemic effects may occur.
Document your assessment of the eye. Record the medication you administered, eye or eyes you treated, and date, time, and dose, according to your facilitys documentation format. Note the patients response to the procedure. Document any adverse effects that occur, the date and time you notified the practitioner, prescribed interventions, and the patients 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.
Concepts and competencies for practice
(9th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Wolters Kluwer.Administration
. The JBI EBP Database. AN: JBI22720Accreditation requirements for acute care hospitals
. Chicago, IL: Accreditation Association for Hospitals and Health Systems. (Level VII)Interruptions lead to errors and unfinished Wait, what was I doing?
Nurse Advise-ERR, 11(2), 14. https://www.ismp.org/resources/side-tracks-safety-express-interruptions-lead-errors-and-unfinished-wait-what-was-i-doing?id=37Nursing services. 42 C.F.R. § 482.23(c)
.Accreditation requirements for acute care hospitals
. Chicago, IL: Accreditation Association for Hospitals and Health Systems. (Level VII)Accreditation requirements for acute care hospitals
. Chicago, IL: Accreditation Association for Hospitals and Health Systems. (Level VII)Recommendations of the Healthcare Infection Control Practices Advisory Committee and the HICPAC/SHEA/APIC/IDSA Hand Hygiene Task Force
. MMWR Recommendations and Reports, 51(RR-16), 145. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/pdf/rr/rr5116.pdf (Level II)Accreditation requirements for acute care hospitals
. Chicago, IL: Accreditation Association for Hospitals and Health Systems. (Level VII)Infection control. 42 C.F.R. § 482.42
.Patients rights. 42 C.F.R. § 482.13(c)(1)
.Accreditation requirements for acute care hospitals
. Chicago, IL: Accreditation Association for Hospitals and Health Systems. (Level VII)Accreditation requirements for acute care hospitals
. Chicago, IL: Accreditation Association for Hospitals and Health Systems. (Level VII)A toolkit for improving quality of care
(AHRQ publication no. 13-0015-EF). at https://www.ahrq.gov/professionals/systems/hospital/fallpxtoolkit/index.html (Level VII)Medical record services. 42 C.F.R. § 482.24(b)
.Accreditation requirements for acute care hospitals
. Chicago, IL: Accreditation Association for Hospitals and Health Systems. (Level VII)A policy and procedural approach to safe and effective treatment of patients
. JAMA Ophthalmology, 132, 14761479. http://www.progressivesurgicalsolutions.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/3_JAMA_09042014_article.pdf