Login
Site Search
Subscribe
Modify
Home >
List Archives
EMS - EC handoffs - ER Hallway patients.
Krin135 at aol.com Krin135 at aol.comSun Mar 4 01:40:54 GMT 2007
- Previous message: EMS - EC handoffs - ER Hallway patients.
- Next message: Fwd: [ccm-l] Re: [med-events] Walter Reed
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
In a message dated 3/3/2007 10:55:02 AM Central Standard Time, KMATTOX at aol.com writes: I recognize the EC is overcrowded, often with non - emergencies. That is a policy and societal problem with which we MUST grapple. I recognize that persons call the ambulance and EMS to expedite getting into the ER, but society (consumerism) has assumed that if one arrives by ambulance to an ER, the patient will be seen, triaged, and cared for expediciously (? 5 minutes or less). That assumption becomes a duty when it gets into a court room, especially if a BAD outcome happened after arrival at the hospital and before the hospital and its medical staff assumed care. as I've pointed out before, one major part of this problem (the need to 'warehouse' patients in the ED waiting for critical care or floor beds), can be directly traced to the current nursing shortage and the reluctance of administration staff to provide adequate incentives to recruit and retain nurses at all levels. This needs to go to the point of major teaching hospitals forming active partnerships with nursing schools to improve the pay rate of nursing instructors and figuring out ways to increase the number of nursing preceptors who are willing and able to work one on one with junior and senior nursing students and new graduates to make sure that the new nurses start out right, with not only book knowledge but also the practical knowledge to handle the case load and provide satisfying care to sick patients. This was one of the great advantages of the old Diploma Nursing programs that did not carry over into the more 'professional' requirements developed in the 1970s. Another problem, exacerbated by things like Never 27 and some of the JCAHO requirements, is that far too much nursing time is taken up by paper work, and even the use of bedside computers for direct data entry does not seem to ease that crunch. Increasing the clerical staff will help some, but getting more doctors 'computer savvy' and willing to do at least some of their own data entry (absent a dedicated scribe, another JCAHO requirement...) will help reduce the stress on the nurses and techs who otherwise have to interpret crabbed hand writing and poor spelling. Comments on SNurse-L for many years have shown that the concept that 'nurses eat their young' has only grown as the stress levels of floor nurses have also grown over the years. If we can't get more of our young folks interested in, and comfortable with, direct patient care, then having more doctors, mid level practitioners or field Paramedics will not have any impact on the provision of proper Emergency Department or acute inpatient care. As far as TV setting the standard of care, that has been a problem since "Emergency!", "Marcus Welby, MD," and "Rescue 911" always managed to fix the patients (often exotic) problem in 50 minutes (time off for commercials), and rarely lost a patient. ck Charles S. Krin, DO FAAFP <BR><BR><BR>**************************************<BR> AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at http://www.aol.com.
- Previous message: EMS - EC handoffs - ER Hallway patients.
- Next message: Fwd: [ccm-l] Re: [med-events] Walter Reed
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the trauma-list mailing list
