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patienttalk

You are a high fall risk: A struggle between safety and autonomy

December 28, 2019 by NurseTwain

Nursing care is evaluated and structured from several different agencies and protocols. Nurses are expected to timely document, take all recommended breaks, stay hydrated, care-round every hour, educate on all core measures, keep all family members involved/informed in the plan of care, provide recommendations to doctors, thoroughly assess all six patients, ambulate all six patients twice a day, monitor lab values, among many others, all within a “12-hour” shift. It is often difficult to show compassion, communicate slowly, and provide patient autonomy while all these other measures are being graded.

A nurse once stated at huddle that her goal was to “document as I go.” I and all of the nurses around her could not stop laughing as this was a “quite ambitious” goal to achieve. A typical medpass takes around 10-15 minutes for one patient. Multiply this by 5-6 patients and that results in 50-90 minutes of the morning just ensuring all patients have medications. Documenting on each adds another 60 minutes, all while constantly refreshing the screen for any new orders or urgent patient concerns. Some days all patients are accounted for 4 hours later, and sometimes this is without any documentation.. If it’s not documented, it is not done.

A 12-hr shift is granted two 15 minute breaks and one 30 minute lunch break. Many nurses are lucky to take a full 30 minute lunch and will still get interrupted. It can be lunchtime before I realize that I have not had a sip of water for the past 6 hours, nor have I had the chance to pee.

Care-rounding involves checking the 3 P’s: pain, potty, and positioning, and also any needs at that time. This is expected on each patient every hour.

“Yes, we need to look at your skin.” “No, you cannot get up without us.” The Joint commission is an agency that allows for hospital reimbursement if all quality and core measures are met. This is the greatest concern and the greatest frustration on a medical floor. Upon admission, patients are asked to roll over so nurses can look at their butt, as we must assess for pressure injuries, regardless of the patient age. Patients are also assigned a fall risk scale and placed on a bed/chair alarm so they cannot get up without assistance. Patients are also taught that ambulation is important and getting out of bed will help with recovery; however, this depends on how frequently staff can get into the room. Falls are a major issue, however patients are very much limited by the “restraints” that we are forcing upon them.

“There is no particular time that the doctor will be in.” Many patients wait hours for the doctor to come in and then they are gone within 10 minutes. This leaves the nursing staff to educate the patients on the plan of care, while carrying out any immediate interventions.

Nurses became nurses to help people. The way healthcare is regulated at this time creates a major challenge between helping people and ensuring the chart looks perfect. I value moments to sit down and truly listen to each patient, but these moments are not able to be had every shift. Patients, I assure you that nursing staff are trying their best. There is a lot on our hands .

Until next shift,

Shania

Filed Under: Nursing tips, patient stories Tagged With: falls, healthcare, hospital, jointcommission, nursing, patient, patienttalk, pressure, regulation

The patient with the brain tumor

December 11, 2019 by NurseTwain

It was a 25 y/o male with osteosarcoma of the hip. He was receiving outpatient chemotherapy, but presented to the hospital for uncontrolled pain. After having found to be constipated, he was placed on a bowel regimen. He refused all PO medications due to nausea and vomiting, and also did not want a suppository. It took me nearly 12 hours to get this young man to take the suppository to prevent an impaction. Finally, he took the medication.

When I came back to the hospital two days later, I had found out that this patient had been transferred to critical care after finding a brain tumor. He passed away shortly after. Words cannot express how sad this patient and my interaction with him had affected me. I started to wonder if I had communicated clearly enough? Did I ensure that his wishes and needs were fulfilled? Was I too focused on the simple nursing tasks at hand and disregarding the human being?

Questions like this are what keep me up at night. Tragedies like this refocus my mind to focus on the human, not an order. I hope I did not come off as too hard for this man.

Tomorrow is not guaranteed. Count your blessings.

Until next shift,

Shania

Filed Under: patient stories Tagged With: cancer, nursetwain, nursing, patient, patienttalk

A personal care plan: how to refuel after a shift

December 2, 2019 by NurseTwain

Nurses create care plans for patients to guide nursing interventions toward favorable outcomes. We also need to create our own care plans for ourselves in order to continue to care for others. I have created a list of healthy interventions to ensure that I am full, so that I can pour out to others.

  • EXERCISE 3x/week- running, hiking, walking, lifting weights
  • Eat a variety of healthy foods and colors- meal prep for the week to save money and prevent yourself from choosing unhealthy choices
  • Socialize- LIMIT social media. Engage in community events and groups.
  • Go outside- it’s amazing what fresh air can do.
  • Read- fiction, nonfiction, articles, online journals
  • Sleep- Try to take the hour before bed to really wind down from the day.. Stay off the phone and any social media. Read a book or take a nice warm bath.
  • Take a long shower
  • Binge-watch netflix
  • Watch a movie
  • Paint/Color
  • Journal
  • Pray
  • Get your nails done
  • Prepare for the next shift

Until next shift,

Shania

Filed Under: Nursing tips Tagged With: nursetwain, nursing, patient, patienttalk, stress, talk, tips

What makes a good day?

December 2, 2019 by NurseTwain

A good day in the hospital is not like a good day on a day off. It is not a lack of patients, more free time to browse social media, or even a full 30 minute, uninterrupted lunch break (although, that would be nice).

A good day in the hospital is a day when each patient can be cared for individually, rather than quickly checking off the Cerner checklist. It’s a day with a 5 patient load and the chance to focus on the physical and emotional needs and wants of each patient.

It’s a good day when a patient wants to show me their family or a hobby they enjoy and I actual have time to sit down and listen.

It’s a good day when a patient who wants a bath is able to get one when they want it and even get a nice hairdo.

It’s a good day when a doctor appreciates the work that you do and the thought behind any questions.

It’s a good day when even when everything is going wrong, you know you couldn’t have done anything else.

It’s a good day when you have time to read progress notes.

It’s a good day when 0800 charting is done by 1100 when rounding began at 0730.

It’s a good day when there is time to walk a patient in the hallway or go outside in a wheelchair.

Its a good day when you find that one patient of the day that validates why you chose nursing.

It’s a good day when the power of prayer becomes evident.

It’s a good day when cancer has been ruled out.

It’s a good day when nurses work as a team.

What makes a good day?

There is good in every day, you decide how you see it.

Until next shift,

Shania

Filed Under: Nursing tips Tagged With: good day, medicalsurgical, medicine, nursetwain, nursing, patient, patienttalk

Speak Life: The Power of Words

December 2, 2019 by NurseTwain

“The tongue has the power of life and death, and those who love it will eat its fruit.” Proverbs 18:21 (NIV)

“Words kill, words give life; they’re either poison or fruit- you choose.” Proverbs 18:21 (MSG)

Choose Joy. Those two words I wear on my badge every day at the hospital. The most common compliment that I receive is that I am always smiling. The hospital is full of emotional highs and emotional lows. Being a caregiver at the bedside, it is my job to at least look like I am having a good day. A smile can brighten the room, and hospital rooms can be quite dark- both literally and figuratively. From new terminal diagnoses to upcoming procedures, the patient and family are not at their highlights of life. The least I can do is smile, and show genuine compassion.

I choose joy everyday because my patients cannot afford much less. In the midst of low blood sugars, falling blood pressures, calls for pain medications, family phone calls, each patient has the right to be treated individually with kindness, autonomy, and respect.

Whether speaking to yourself or to someone else, the words spoken have either the power to heal or the power to kill. There is a time to be sad and a time to be happy, however words must be carefully thought before they are spoken. Here are a few examples:

  • A doctor rushes into the room to share the plan without asking for any clarification, questions, or concerns. – Speaks death
  • A doctor shares unwanted test results at the bedside at an appropriate time. – Speaks life
  • A prayer before a procedure. – Speaks life
  • A word of encouragement and hope at discharge as a patient transitions to rehab after experiencing deficits from a stroke. – Speaks life
  • A dying patient breathes their last breath after a loved one says that it is okay to go. – Speaks life
  • Nursing retention rates are low at places where bullying is prominent. – Speaks death
  • Powered by People is a service utilized to recognize caregivers by their coworkers for their hard work- Speaks life
  • The minute a person gives up, is the minute their body starts to decline; “I can’t…” – Speaks death
  • You would never speak to someone else like you speak about yourself/ your own abilities. – Speaks death

Are you speaking with kindness today? Do your words speak life into a person or do they speak death? You decide.

Until next shift,

Shania

Filed Under: Nursing tips Tagged With: life, nursetwain, nursing, patient, patienttalk, power, shania, speak, speak life, words

A day in the life of a nurse

December 1, 2019 by NurseTwain

Here is a “typical” hour by hour breakdown of a 12-hour shift with 5-6 patients:

0645-0730: Huddle and report

0730-1000: Gather medications, pass medications, shift assessments, review MD orders, get everyone into chair for breakfast

1000-1200: Document assessments, care round, answer call lights, call family member, clarify orders, d/c patients

1200-1230: lunch?

1230-1400: d/c and admit patients, code?, care round

1400-1600: pass medications

1600-1800: update report cards, care round

1800-1845: Make sure pain medications are given, IVF are infusing, all orders are completed and reordered, MD responses documented, I/O, care plans updated

1845-1930: Night shift report

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: day shift, nursing, patient, patienttalk, shift

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