Originally Posted by northshore08
Hey slobgob...thanks! Yes, the high census days are increasingly the norm according to the nurses who have been there for years. The docs are pretty fast, though, waiting area times are still minimal. We keep the majority of what we see, and from what I have seen so far we ship the cardiacs who require intervention, neuro (when the neurology services will accept...) L&D issues, & major peds (pretty much anything but basic medsurg peds.) These only go after stabilization, so as far as I am concerned, they are treated in the ED.
Pua, I definitely disagree with you that Pali Momi is a "low level" facility. Now after working at Wahiawa and interviewing at Kahuku, I would say that those facilities might be a better fit for that category, and, as you said, have their niche.

Kahuku serves its purpose as a stabilization unit and it does its job well. Near-drownings, MI's, traumas---they are all shipped to Queens but Kahuku does a great job stabilizing them for transport. Wahiawa does the same.
Pali Momi is not very different. It is very much low-level as we see from the patients that are shipped from that facility. It is only a hundred beds or so, certainly not capable of anything but stabilizing the very sickest of patients.
There is so much that Pali Momi does NOT do but the great thing is that they recognize that they are low-level and move their patients out as needed.
Pali Momi does a great job but it is still just a low level facility. Nice, but very limited. Please do not take this as an insult!!
Can I ask you how long you have been on Oahu? I am sorry but it really sounds like you are not very familiar with our hospitals. PLEAASE don't take this as an insult, it is just an observation and has me wondering.
In any event----welcome! I seriously do not mean to be insulting but I was born and raised here and I know the islands and the hospitals here. I am afraid I am being insulting and I don't mean to be.