On (b)(6) 2015, the senior pharmacy technician at (b)(6) had contacted baxter technical services in (b)(4) to report a total of (b)(4) bags that had completed delivery before the scheduled completion.The bags were pumped and infused to (b)(6) patients.All patients are home care patients.The pharmacy had created a batch of total parenteral bags for each patient to bring home for the week.It was reported by the nurses that the infusion pumps used to infuse the bags started alarming.When the nurses checked why the infusion pumps were alarming, the nurses noticed the bags had run dry.In regards to patient status, the senior pharmacy technician indicated that the (b)(6) patients are stable and doing fine.This report is for the (b)(6) female, patient f;(b)(4) reports from the same event as it involved (b)(6) different patients.
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The evaluation of the data provided from the two em1200 compounders at clinical specialties showed no evidence the em1200 compounder contributed to the bags prematurely running dry during infusion.Curlin infusion pump instructions provided to patient (b)(4): infuse at 2500ml iv four days per week (sun, tues, thurs, sat) over 10 hours with a 1 hour taper up and 1 hour taper down via curlin pump.The curlin infusion pumps used to infuse the bags in this event will be reported and reviewed by the manufacturer.Baxter healthcare is not the manufacturer of the curlin infusion pump.Evaluation method: data validation.Order entry labels, compounder mixcheck reports and the black-box data were reviewed and evaluated.Results: user device interface.It is unknown how or what caused the nutrition bags to run dry.Conclusion: no failure detected, device operated within specification.The information from the data provided found that the em1200 compounder did not contribute to this event.Device not available for return.
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