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The Right Vaccine for the Right Patient

pharmacist giving a vaccine shot
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The College has recently received several reports and complaints from patients who were given the wrong vaccine at a community pharmacy. There have been reports of mix ups between the monovalent and bivalent COVID-19 vaccines as well as mix ups between the flu vaccine and the COVID-19 vaccine. In some cases, patients received a different brand than they preferred (i.e., received a Pfizer vaccine instead of Moderna).

A foundational principle of the AIMS Program is to enable the sharing of lessons learned from medication events through reporting, which results in ongoing process improvements to minimize errors and maximize health outcomes. Encouraging a safety culture in which pharmacy professionals are comfortable having open, honest discussions about medication events within their teams without fear of punitive outcomes, makes pharmacy and the collective health care system safer.

De-identified, aggregate data from the AIMS Program shows that, since the initiation of the COVID vaccination program, there have been 754 events recorded related to COVID-19 vaccines, with 96% of them being incidents, meaning they reached the patient. While the harm level was generally classified within AIMS as none or low, incidents such as these can erode public confidence in the care that they receive from the pharmacy. In addition, if the error is not caught, a patient could believe they have some level of protection that they didn’t receive (i.e., they think they’ve received their COVID vaccine and have that protection, but instead got a second flu shot.)

The most common contributing factors for incidents reported through AIMS were staffing issues, lack of staff education, drug-related issues such as look-alike packaging and unclear or absent labelling, missing patient information, lack of quality control systems and miscommunication of drug orders.

Addressing Contributing Factors in Workflow

Preventing these types of incidents can involve changes to workflow at the pharmacy. Based on the aggregate and de-identified contributing factors data from AIMS, here are some potential practices to consider:

Looking at Your Pharmacy’s Workflow: Practices to Help Prevent Vaccine Errors


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Implement a double check.
Label the syringe, not just the basket.
Confirm the choice with the patient.
Minimize multi-tasking.
Use visual markers for different vaccines.
Vaccine Scheduling Resources

Pharmacy professionals who have questions about the scheduling of COVID vaccines and boosters, should consult the Ministry’s COVID-19 Vaccine Guidance document.


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