#1 Nursing Resource: 806,000 unique visitors per month

Log in   Sign up   Why join?   | Layout: Switch to narrow layout Color: gold style blue style rose style
Nursing Community for Nurses
Home Forums Articles Specialty Students Region Career Resources

Advanced Search Site Help Site Map

Telemetry Monitoring



Currently Online
Members: 399
Guests: 2,216
2,615

Job Spotlight
Sales & Customer Service Rep
Broughton, Illinois
Forum Spotlight
Distance Learning for Nursing

Nursing Degrees

Nursing Articles

Lives Forever Changed – I am Glad!
The Tip
Through a different set of eyes...How a patient changed me.
A Loving Pair
A Patient who Changed my Life
On Death And Dying
Patients who have changed our lives good or bad
They Changed My Life With Exercise
What We Do Not Learn In School
What I Love About My Job
Submit An Article

Nursing Jobs

Job Seeker: Employer:

Scrubs & Gear

Newsletter

Subscribe to the free allnurses.com email newsletter. We will keep you informed of nursing news, articles, discussions, and more.

Enter your email address:

Read current:
Nursing Newsletter

How-To allnurses

allnurses videos

Welcome to allnurses: A Nursing Community for Nurses

The largest most active online nursing community. Join 303,888 nurses from around the world to learn, communicate, and network. For full allnurses.com access, register today - it's free! Problems during registration? Please don't hesitate to contact support.

Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #1  
Old Aug 27, 2005, 08:54 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2005
Telemetry Monitoring

I work in an 18bed CCU in a very busy medical center. We have 2-3 patients most days with at least 1 new orientee with us during the day. We are under new management who has made the brilliant money saving decision to take away our telemetry techs. Of course we do not solely depend on the techs to do all the monitoring, but it does come in quite handy whe your are busy in one of your rooms and your other patient decides to misbehave. We currently have at least 6 phones attached outside rooms which the techs immediately call on when a patient has an arrhythmia. A few of us in the unit have been wondering what is the monitoring situation in other hospitals. Most of us find this upcoming change not to be for the better good of our patients. Is this common practice in all CCU's?

Top
  #2  
Old Aug 27, 2005, 10:49 PM
Registered User
Join Date: May 2001

Well I work in a CCU where we monitor our own tele and it is scary!
We used to have monitor tech I guess, before I worked there, but when I started the techs on tenth floor that monitor house wide used to watch ours too but 2 years ago the hospital enlarged and they added tele room and it was decided that CCU would monitor their own.

It is pretty scary when it really busy and then someone just happens to catch a VTach pop up and yell "Is anybody in A he is in VTach & the code ensues!

Top
  #3  
Old Aug 28, 2005, 11:43 AM
sirI's Avatar
Iris backwards, Co-Administrator
Join Date: Jun 2005

In large units as yours, I believe this is an unsafe practice to do away with them.

Top
  #4  
Old Sep 05, 2005, 05:07 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2005

Originally Posted by ccurn1
I work in an 18bed CCU in a very busy medical center. We have 2-3 patients most days with at least 1 new orientee with us during the day. We are under new management who has made the brilliant money saving decision to take away our telemetry techs. Of course we do not solely depend on the techs to do all the monitoring, but it does come in quite handy whe your are busy in one of your rooms and your other patient decides to misbehave. We currently have at least 6 phones attached outside rooms which the techs immediately call on when a patient has an arrhythmia. A few of us in the unit have been wondering what is the monitoring situation in other hospitals. Most of us find this upcoming change not to be for the better good of our patients. Is this common practice in all CCU's?
This is an accident waiting to happen. You can't be in 2 places at once and it took a code in our unit and an angry cardiologist to intervene before our concerns were finally taken seriously. If you can't have your pt's monitored remotely, then would it be possible to cross train a secretary? If not, please take this to your quality control officer for a resolution. Good luck!

Top
  #5  
Old Sep 05, 2005, 06:16 PM
hrtprncss's Avatar
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2005

ok don't everyone jump on me on that HIPAA thing and I'm not suggesting or condoning it I'm just saying it's an option. We usually get adjacent rooms as much as possible so we could just roll the chair from one spot to the next in front of the patients room, when we have two patients......now for what i was saying earlier, how bout if your patient is intubated, you can piggyback two simultaneous graphs on one screen in a patients room - the patient in that room and another patient that's in the same unit. You can omit the patient's name on the screen monitor and still not have a problem with full disclosure on the main monitor at the station. REMEMBER I'M NOT SAYING DO IT, I'M JUST SAYING IT CAN BE DONE

Top
  #6  
Old Sep 05, 2005, 06:22 PM
hrtprncss's Avatar
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2005

One more thing isn't there a charge nurse in most icu's with just one patient usually the ''easiest'' patient, who sits within feet of the unit secretary where the main console for the monitors are, this is where the orders are being processed by both the charge rn at the same time. One other solution is to have the unit secretaries be sent and competencied in ekg monitoring.

Top
  #7  
Old Sep 05, 2005, 07:33 PM
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2004

Originally Posted by ccurn1
I work in an 18bed CCU in a very busy medical center. We have 2-3 patients most days with at least 1 new orientee with us during the day. We are under new management who has made the brilliant money saving decision to take away our telemetry techs. Of course we do not solely depend on the techs to do all the monitoring, but it does come in quite handy whe your are busy in one of your rooms and your other patient decides to misbehave. We currently have at least 6 phones attached outside rooms which the techs immediately call on when a patient has an arrhythmia. A few of us in the unit have been wondering what is the monitoring situation in other hospitals. Most of us find this upcoming change not to be for the better good of our patients. Is this common practice in all CCU's?
We have a 10 bed ccu and no Telemetry tech. Our Telemetry floor has 42 beds and no Telemetry tech.

Top
  #8  
Old Sep 07, 2005, 01:24 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2003

I work on a tele floor at a tertiary hospital, where 'tele' includes stable drips, a-lines, chest tubes, and heart and lung transplants after they are stablized off of the vent. At night we carry up to 4 patients primary care and have one secretary that also doubles as monitor tech. They took our CNA's in May, and with 36 beds I dread the day that they decide that we no longer rate our secretary

Top
  #9  
Old Sep 07, 2005, 04:59 AM
Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2005

Originally Posted by hrtprncss
One more thing isn't there a charge nurse in most icu's with just one patient usually the ''easiest'' patient, who sits within feet of the unit secretary where the main console for the monitors are, this is where the orders are being processed by both the charge rn at the same time. One other solution is to have the unit secretaries be sent and competencied in ekg monitoring.
We use to have a charge nurse out of assignment or with and easy patient.But since new management change we no longer have a charge with light assignments and our base number of 9 nurses was decreased to 8 on day shift. Also we are responsible for taking our own orders off no one else. If we train the secretary to monitor ecg what is the difference if they watch it or if the continue to let the trained tech do it?

Top
  #10  
Old Sep 07, 2005, 02:50 PM
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2005

We have an 8 bed unit with 8 tele (soon to be 16 tele). We staff with 3 licensed staff and a secretary. We have always watch our own and tele monitors.

Top
Sponsored Links
 
Would you like to comment?
Join or Login if already a member.


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
telemetry monitoring ratio choirgurl67 Cardiac Nursing 13 Jul 27, 2007 09:53 PM
Telemetry monitoring Bwick Cardiac Nursing 22 Jan 31, 2007 03:49 PM
Telemetry monitoring Bwick General Nursing Discussion 7 Nov 07, 2006 03:44 PM
Telemetry monitoring capnnikkiRN General Nursing Discussion 3 Oct 26, 2006 03:18 PM


Currently Active Users Viewing: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search



New To Site?
Need Help?

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:31 PM.

Telemetry Monitoring

Copyright © 1996-2008, allnurses.com. All rights reserved.  allnurses.com, Inc. Advertising Information