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More time for what really matters

Ready-to-administer medication for IV therapy 

With at least 85 % of hospital patients receiving intravenous treatment1, infusion therapy takes up a substantial portion of your time. And it is connected with various risks. 

Given the shortage of health care professionals, we focus on bringing simplicity to your infusion therapy workflows. The aim is to help you achieve peace of mind during medication preparation and to save more time for what really matters – taking care of your patients. 

Infusion for a patient at the bedside
  • Up to

    0%

    Time nurses spend on preparation and administration of injectable medication during an average shift2,3

  • 0M

    WHO‘s projected shortfall of health care professionals by 20304

  • 0%

    Reduction of preparation steps achieved with the use of Duplex®5

Save time
Faster than manual mixing due to fewer handling steps and less preparation time.

Save products
Eliminates the use of needles, syringes and medication vials.

Reduce risks
Reduces the risks associated with the manual medication admixture process, like chemical contamination, needlestick injuries, microbial contamination and medication errors.

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References

1. Mattox, E. A. (2017). Complications of peripheral venous access devices: prevention, detection, and recovery strategies. Critical care nurse, 37(2), e1-e14.​

2. Thomson, M. S. et al. (2009). Nursing Time Devoted to Medication Administration in Long-Term Care: Clinical, Safety, and Resource Implications. J Am Geriatr Soc., 57(2), 266-272.​

3. Armitage G, Knapman H. (2003). Adverse events in drug administration: a literature review. J Nurs Manag. Mar., 11(2), 130-140. ​

4. https://www.who.int/health-topics/health-workforce#tab=tab_1 (2024-12-05)​

5. B. Braun. An Innovative IV Antibiotic Preparation Device to Release Time to Care and Aseptic Capacity. 2024. Poster abstract accepted by QATS 2024 (available upon request). Full manuscript in preparation.​

6. Clark, C. (2023). Saving time when preparing intravenous antibiotics. British Journal of Nursing, 32(5), 246-250.​