Effort To Standardize U.S. Hospitals’ Use of Color-Coded Wristbands on Patients Underway

Effort To Standardize U.S. Hospitals’ Use of Color-Coded Wristbands on Patients Underway

Jan Emerson of the California Hospital Association, Beth Feldpush of the American Hospital Association and Niraj Sehgal of UC-San Francisco spoke with California Healthline about the pros and cons of the project.

In a California Healthline Special Report by Deirdre Kennedy, experts discuss potential benefits and pitfalls of color-coded wristbands, which hospitals nationwide use to help alert staff to problems like drug allergies or indicate patient preferences, such as “Do not resuscitate.”

The problem is that hospitals use a wide variety of colors with little standardization for what those colors mean.

The Special Report includes comments from:

Emerson said, “It’s really important to understand that color-coded wrist bands are not the way of determining what a patient’s risk factors are for allergies or falls or that sort of thing. The clinicians should always be looking in a patient’s chart and the wristbands are sort of a secondary method for communicating in a fast paced environment.” (Kennedy, California Healthline, 10/15).

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