Mild Cognitive Decline or Physical Limitations: What’s a Nurse to Do?

Noticing small changes in what’s possible.

I worked for many years in infection prevention and control, and loved it. Still do. But I loved bedside work too, and it was always in the back of my mind that I might one day return to staff work. That is, until I took care of a family member during the last year of his life.

While I think I provided him with reasonably good care—let’s not get into the emotional connection that made me a less objective caregiver than were his fantastic CNAs—there was no fooling myself any longer. After years away from the bedside, my assessment skills have slipped. I’m not used to working while wearing glasses (without which I can’t read labels or check for reddened skin or cloudy urine). And arthritis in my wrists meant that those bed-to-walker transfers were not optimally safe.

What about multitasking, 12-hour shifts?

My difficulty in providing physical care made me wonder whether my cognitive skills, too, might not be up to managing the pace and pressure of floor work today. I may still be good at supporting and teaching, but can I multitask through 12 hours of nonstop problem-solving and decision-making?

In “When Is It Time to Leave Nursing?” in this month’s AJN, nurse Janet Blake […]

2019-05-21T12:18:44-04:00May 21st, 2019|career, Nursing|0 Comments

Case of Nurse Charged with Homicide for Medication Error Raises Concerns

Every nurse’s nightmare.

On February 1, Radonda Leanne Vaught, a former nurse at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, was indicted and arrested for impaired adult abuse and reckless homicide. She is accused of inadvertently administering the wrong medication and causing a patient’s death in an incident in late 2017.

This is every nurse’s nightmare.

According to the CMS report from its investigation, Vaught administered IV vecuronium (a neuromuscular blocking agent that causes paralysis and is often used during surgery) instead of IV Versed (a sedating agent) to an anxious patient undergoing a diagnostic scan. The patient stopped breathing, suffered brain damage, and subsequently died. Vaught was charged with recklessness because she overrode the automated medication dispensing system and didn’t follow standard procedures in properly checking the drug name or in monitoring the patient after administering the medication.

What the CMS report says.

The CMS report, which includes interviews with Vaught as well as witnesses and safety officers at the hospital, notes the following information about Vaught’s actions while she was in the medication system searching for the medication:

“[Vaught]. . . was talking to [an] Orientee while he/she was searching the ADC for the Versed and had typed in the first 2 letters of Versed which are VE and chose […]

Health Technology Hazards: Top 10 for 2012

Advances in health technology can save patients’ lives, but can also cause harm, as the recent Ecri Institute report, Top 10 Technology Hazards for 2012, reminds us. Here’s a snapshot of the hazards nurses should be focusing on, and some suggestions they give on how to prevent them.

1. Alarm hazards
The risk: With nurses being constantly bombarded by bells, it’s easy to see how alarm fatigue can set in, leading to desensitization, nurses being unable to distinguish the urgency level of alarms, and improper alarm adjusting.

Some suggestions: According to the report, a facility should look at the big picture, examining the entire alarm environment when setting up an alarm-management system. Alarm notification and response protocols should be developed to ensure that each alarm will be recognized, that the appropriate caregiver will be notified, and that the alarm will be promptly addressed. Policies should also be established to control alarm silencing, modification, and disabling.

2. Radiation exposure
The risk: High levels of radiation used during radiation therapy can cause serious harm if errors occur, including damage to normal tissue and organs. And despite radiation levels being lower in diagnostic settings, the increasing number of patients undergoing diagnostic radiography may reveal more risks in the future.

Some suggestions
: The report suggests that adequate […]

2016-11-21T13:11:03-05:00January 5th, 2012|Nursing|0 Comments

When Good Nurses Make Mistakes

The next day, as I prepared my medication tray with shaking hands, two physicians sat at the nurses’ station, talking too loudly as they discussed the medication error and wondered which nurse had made it. Overhearing them, I turned to confess, feeling like a marked woman. They muttered something in my direction, shook their heads, and quickly returned to their charting.

That’s an excerpt from fairly late in “Roger’s Angst,” the Reflections essay in the April issue of AJN. It explores the crippling shame, anxiety, and self-doubt that good nurses can feel when they make mistakes. And it suggests that no one, however conscientious they may be, is free from error in a long career—though few ever reveal their little secrets, even if we might all gain from the knowledge. A touchy subject, to say the least; we hope you’ll read the entire essay and consider weighing in with your own experience. Anonymous comments are, as always, fine.—JM, senior editor/blog editor

With Inadequate Staffing, ‘Nonessential’ Care Goes First–Then Patient Safety

A coworker of mine made a medication error a few weeks ago. It was a multifactorial error—the medication had been ordered wrong, labeled wrong, and administered wrong—and was investigated accordingly. That particular nurse was also “tripled,” with two ICU trauma patients and one critically ill medical resident patient. The nurse’s workload wasn’t factored into the documentation or investigation of the error, though, since the nurse manager didn’t consider it relevant. I heard her say, “An extra patient shouldn’t make any difference in the standard procedure for passing medications.”

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