Re: No empty beds allowed
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This may put an RN in the position of having a patient assigned to her while she is dealing with a critical patient and not knowing about it for 30-60 minutes.
If all the RN staff is busy, likely all the physician staff is busy too, and the nonurgent patient will not get faster care, they will just be waiting in a different room. Is there an advantage to that? In our hospital there is a TV in the lobby but not in ER rooms and patients prefer to spend most of their wait time in the lobby.
If you bring back more people then the potential for disruption increases, especially if they come back expecting their care to begin and staffing doesn't allow that.
What is the advantage to the patient of the new policy? It will look good on paper to have them come back early, but there will still be a delay in treatment if a crisis is going on....what's the point? Would it be more effective to find a spot for waiting room patients that would be quiet with dim lights where they could lie on stretchers (like headache pts). You'd have to work out guidelines for visitors- no food, no TV, etc to make this truly a quiet room.
What about protocols so the triage RN could start things up, give pain meds, IV fluid, order an Xray before they are taken back. Do you have a walk in care area as opposed to the main emergent ER?
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