Re: Standing Medication Orders???
Some parents just really don't like medication, especially for non-urgent situations... I think others just want to avoid medication errors and so they say no medication at all.
I don't have a copy of our orders here, but off the top of my head: tylenol, ibuprofen, benadryl, oil of cloves, kaopectate, pseudoephedrine, tums.
Our permission slip is a blanket one, with space for parents to write any specifics. Lots of parents write "no aspirin" (duh!) and some write "no ibuprofen". Sometimes parents have sent Chinese or homeopathic medications with their kids; I've never had to administer them, though.
If the parent says "no meds" or the kid refuses? I do whatever non-medical things I can (and I do those for everyone, whether they're also getting medication or not)--water and shade for headaches, hot water bottles and exercise for cramps. If the kid is really suffering, I'll call the parents and make sure I'm doing what they'd want me to do. Sometimes they'll say "OK, go ahead and give some Tylenol".
The most important thing I do when giving treatment is ask: "What do you do when this happens at home?" You can get a lot of information from that question.
Sometimes I feel like what I do is damage control: I try to figure out exactly what the parents would want, because they'll be unhappy if, according to them, you've undertreated OR overtreated. Make sure you check the health form / med permission for EVERY kid, EVERY time.
And where do we draw the lines for administering meds?... exactly where the standing orders / protocols do. I very seldom have anything that's not covered by them. We've sometimes had nurses who were uncomfortable with giving meds, feeling that they're diagnosing. OTCs treat symptoms, and giving them doesn't imply diagnosis, unless one ignores signs of something more serious.
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