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On Euphemisms and Learning to Be Present

By Alicia Marie Hinton, who is a BSN student at the College of New Rochelle School of Nursing in New Rochelle, NY. This is her first post for this blog.

My senior year preceptorship was an assignment on a palliative and acute care unit at a busy medical center. When I received the assignment, I prayed that no patient of mine would die during my time on the unit. Every nursing student is afraid of their first patient death. Simulation and course work prepare students in various ways for this experience, but nothing can really prepare you for the emotions you’ll feel. Some students experience a patient death during an undergraduate nursing program, but for others it may not happen until their first year or two working as an RN. I hoped to never endure it, but knew it was inevitable.

During report, working alongside my preceptor, I listened anxiously to the status of the various patients. Since my first day on the unit, I’d practiced my therapeutic techniques and researched different cultural needs pertaining to the death of a patient. I felt culturally competent and well informed about what a nurse should do when a patient dies, but I couldn’t shake my fear. What would I say to the family? Would they value […]

2016-12-09T11:57:13-05:00November 28th, 2011|career, students|7 Comments

That Acute Attention to Detail, Bordering on Wariness…

By Kinsey Morgan, RN. Kinsey is a new nurse who lives in Texas and currently works in the ICU in which she formerly spent three years as a CNA. Her last (and first) post at this blog can be found here.

It seems that nursing schools across the world subscribe to certain mantras regarding the correct way to do things. Different schools teach the same things with utmost urgency. Hand washing is one of the never-ending lessons that comes to mind. How many times do nursing students wash their hands while demonstrating the correct way to perform a procedure? I vividly remember actually having to be evaluated on the skill of hand washing itself.

Another of the regularly emphasized points of nursing school is double-checking. One of my first clinical courses required students to triple-check patient identification before giving medications. We were to look at the medication administration record, the patient’s wristband, and then actually have the patient state their name.

As a new nurse learning several new computer systems for charting, etc., I’ve noticed that the old attention to detail, ground into my soul during my school days, now seems easy to overlook, since computers do so much of the work. Of course, computer charting and electronic MARs* have simplified tasks and made time management much less daunting. But sometimes I worry about the hidden cost of such improvements.

I intend, vow, resolve to make an effort to remain aware of how […]

2016-11-21T13:11:23-05:00November 21st, 2011|Nursing, Patients|2 Comments

Addressing Traumatic Injury in Older Adults

By Sylvia Foley, AJN senior editor

Frank Jones, age 83, arrives at a local trauma center after falling down a flight of stairs in his home. Initially diagnosed with two fractured ribs, a fractured ulna, and a fractured tibia, he’s admitted to the ICU.  At first, things seem to go well—his electrolytes and bloodwork appear to be within normal limits, and his vital signs are stable. But the next day he becomes increasingly unstable. What’s going on?

Trauma is currently the seventh leading cause of death in older adults—and older adults are more likely to suffer complications and die than are younger ones. But as author Christine Cutugno points out in this month’s CE, “The ‘Graying’ of Trauma Care: Addressing Traumatic Injury in Older Adults,” advanced age isn’t a predictor of trauma outcome. Many trauma-related complications are preventable.

What guides current care? While standards of care for geriatric patients and for trauma patients exist, as yet none have been specifically developed for and tested in geriatric trauma patients. Until that happens, Cutugno writes, “nurses will need to be guided by measures known to prevent iatrogenic complications in other patient populations.”

To that end, Cutugno first reviews common mechanisms of traumatic injury in older adults and discusses the effects of aging and comorbidities. She points […]

2016-11-21T13:11:24-05:00November 18th, 2011|nursing perspective|1 Comment

On Protocols, Shortcuts, and the Unforgettable Smell of Ether

By Linda Johanson, EdD, RN, associate professor of nursing at Appalachian State University, Boone, NC

In nursing school my professors warned us of the dangers of taking shortcuts when performing procedures. They cautioned that deviations from protocols could lead to serious error. I had to learn this lesson the hard way, and although it’s been about 30 years since I made this mistake, I still remember the occasion like it happened yesterday.

The patient was in ICU bed #10, a glassed-in isolation room across from the nursing station. He was in his mid-60s, but he was mentally handicapped, so he appeared and acted younger. He was in the unit recovering from a respiratory arrest, and on the day I was caring for him he was still intubated, but breathing spontaneously.

I was completing an assessment on him when the charge nurse called to me from the nursing station, and I stuck my head out the door to see what she wanted. She told me there was a new order to remove the patient’s indwelling urinary catheter. I checked my pockets for a 10 mL syringe to perform the procedure but didn’t find one.

When I complained about having to go all the way to the supply room to collect one, the charge nurse queried, “Well, […]

2016-11-29T13:29:41-05:00November 9th, 2011|nursing perspective|9 Comments

Toward a Less Painful Death: ICD Deactivation at End of Life

By Sylvia Foley, AJN senior editor

A few years ago, in a letter to the editor of another journal, an NP described how one of her patients, a man on home hospice care, had suffered 33 shocks as he lay dying in his wife’s arms. The source of those shocks, his implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD), reportedly “got so hot that it burned through his skin.” The device that had been implanted to save his life caused this man and his wife great distress in his final hours. Device deactivation at the end of life is an option; but in this case, apparently, it had never been discussed.

Stories like this one helped to inspire the research reported in this month’s CE feature, “Deactivation of ICDs at the End of Life: A Systematic Review of Clinical Practices and Provider and Patient Attitudes,” by James Russo.

ICDs, standard treatment for people at risk for life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias, work to restore normal rhythm by delivering a high-energy, painful electrical shock. The devices are so effective that people with ICDs often die from causes other than heart disease. But once a person with an ICD begins actively dying, as in the case above, the device may cause needless pain and prolonged suffering. So […]

2016-11-21T13:11:44-05:00October 14th, 2011|nursing research|0 Comments
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