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Jan 17, 2005, 08:48 AM
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Family visitation in ICU
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Hi...I just found this site yesterday....it looks like a great way to get to know people and find out current opinions about nursing issues....
I am currently working in a busy community hospital in a 12 bed ICU....
We have visitation issues....our unit use to allow family in to see patients indiscriminately....then limited visitation fro 11 - 4 am and 8 - 10 pm. Family members are getting use to these hours but we still have many problems.....
Would like to get other opinions.....
Do you think their is a relationship between family presence in the ICU and positive outcomes fro confused and ventilated patients?
Do you think the length of stay is decreased because of family presence?
Are the incidents of injury reduced by family presence?
How often do you use restraints? Do you find you need restraints less when family are allowed more visitation?
Do you have open visitation?
Ths is a hot topic in our unit....many nurses think visitors interfere with patient care....others think they are helpful....but I believe each situation should be looked at individually - not all situations can be treated the same way.
Thanks for your opinions
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Jan 17, 2005, 12:34 PM
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Ideally, all situations/visitors should be treated individually because yes, some visitors are helpful and supportive and can reduce the need for restraints as well as keep the patient safer in general. Many others, however, can interfere with care and can run the spectrum of anywhere between just being needy and calling on you constantly to flat out disruptive to the patient and the unit in general.
I once allowed a family member who drove a long ways to see her relative stay with her all day and not just the 15 minute intervals per policy. I gave her a chair away from the vent and she sat quietly in a corner all day and the patient was awake enough to appreciate it as well.
The problem was that I literally had to hide her and keep her in there because a very disruptive family of 8-10 people sat in the waiting room waiting for their next visiting time. I had to make sure that they did not see this woman coming in and out of ICU at her leisure.
The problem family never failed to provide 15 minutes of torture to their mother as well as the staff every time they showed up for visits so there was no way I was going to allow them to stay any longer than I had to.
I wish that I could have simply told them that she was allowed to stay because she did not cause problems and interefere with care like they did, but how do you tell an already irrate family something like that?
You can't make exceptions for one while making others follow the rules even though I did do that for 3 days for this particular visitor and I've made exceptions for others as well but I've always had to keep it under the table so that everyone does not start trying to get into ICU at their leisure.
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Jan 17, 2005, 04:01 PM
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RN34TX - you touch on a very important point regarding having everyone follow the same rules. Some family members are fantastic and their presence is very beneficial to the patient, while others are rejects from "The Jerry Springer Show" that you don't want within 20 feet of you or your patient. And you better believe that if you let one bend the rules with your discretion, all the others will hear about it and then the complaining will begin.
In my 11 bed Neurosurgical ICU, we have closed visiting with the following hours:
9:30-10:30 am
2:00-3:30 pm
5:00-6:00pm
8:00-9:30pm
Honestly, I feel like it's more than enough with the majority of our patients. Because I work in neuro, many family members stand about helplessly, expecting you to sit and look at them the entire time. Many neuro patients go weeks and weeks with very little change, and I've found the families often start to obsess about things that are irrelevant because they don't want to deal with the magnitude of the brain injury.
Having scheduled visiting, I always try to cluster care in such a manner to maximize the family's time with their loved one. We also have an open unit, so we try to get procedures out of the way outside of visiting time, which helps protect all the patient's privacy.
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Jan 17, 2005, 04:05 PM
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Our neuro ICU just implemented open visiting hours except during shift changes. It is a wonderful concept but I think there needs to be more control and rules for the visitors. What ends up happening is visitors sitting at the nurses station while the nurse is working with "mom", they come and go ALL night long with no regard for the other patients or nurses. Management doesn't back up the nurses because we don't want any unsatisfactory customer service scores.
When family members come from long distances or truely help the patient I have no problem with them being in the room. If I have to trip over their chair everytime I want to see the pt I have a problem. About 60-70% of the time it isn't a problem, it is the other % that ruin it.
Does anyone else have open visiting hours and what rules do you enforce?
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Jan 17, 2005, 05:25 PM
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Originally Posted by Elenaster
RN34TX - you touch on a very important point regarding having everyone follow the same rules. Some family members are fantastic and their presence is very beneficial to the patient, while others are rejects from "The Jerry Springer Show" that you don't want within 20 feet of you or your patient.
ITA...and love the analogy to Jerry Springer show ...some I swear had to be recent guest of his....
It is sooo 'PC' now to support open visiting...with little emphasis on potential negative impacts on nursing care, privacy, and patient response. When we individualize/open up visiting time, we set a precedent other visitors demand.When we must limit disruptive families and they complain, we nurses are frequently reprimanded.
I'm glad other ICU nurses here notice this.
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Jan 17, 2005, 09:23 PM
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Open visiting is PC but interestingly enough, almost exclusively supported only by those who do not have to be exposed to abusive and disruptive families.
Same goes for the ever so popular PC "families should be present during a code."
Jerry Springer drama and lawsuits waiting to happen, that's all that is.
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Jan 17, 2005, 09:44 PM
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Originally Posted by RN34TX
Open visiting is PC but interestingly enough, almost exclusively supported only by those who do not have to be exposed to abusive and disruptive families.
Same goes for the ever so popular PC "families should be present during a code."
Jerry Springer drama and lawsuits waiting to happen, that's all that is.
I agree. I also find it interesting that this is so often supported by the daytime administration folks who are much less concerned than I am (at 2 AM) about some gang banger coming to finish the job.
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Jan 18, 2005, 08:37 AM
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Originally Posted by PJMommy
I agree. I also find it interesting that this is so often supported by the daytime administration folks who are much less concerned than I am (at 2 AM) about some gang banger coming to finish the job.
Wow you said it PJ Mommy! Everytime I read a nurse supporting open visiting I wonder where they work and what position they hold. while I do get some lovely cooperative and helpful visitors (some I would love to let stay with confused granny cuz it is helpful), I increasingly encounter hostility, threats and violet outbursts. Today's general public cannot seem to handle crisis without acting out...and I am not staffed to deal with this AND patient care.
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Jan 18, 2005, 10:16 AM
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Although our unit has closed visitation hours....our unit is easily accessible....There are no locks on the double doors and there is no one preventing them from walking through the double doors to the unit itself. Each patient door can be locked and this is encouraged by our manager. There is a red phone visitors are suppose to pick up and use to find out if it is convenient to visit. Many do not use the red phone.... We limit visitors to two at a time... but many do not pay attention... Some nurses do not enforce the rule and then all the other staff nurses receive aggravation from the families when they follow the guidelines. Another problem is families try to wake up sedated patients while they are on the ventilator or loosen or remove restraints while they are visiting and forget to replace them when they leave. Patient confidentiality is compromised when family members approach the nurses station.....we have glass doors on our rooms so all our patients are easily seen by the nurses....and unfortunately sometimes visitors....Do you have some of these same problems....
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Jan 18, 2005, 11:14 AM
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Originally Posted by bfjworr
Although our unit has closed visitation hours....our unit is easily accessible....There are no locks on the double doors and there is no one preventing them from walking through the double doors to the unit itself. Each patient door can be locked and this is encouraged by our manager. There is a red phone visitors are suppose to pick up and use to find out if it is convenient to visit. Many do not use the red phone.... We limit visitors to two at a time... but many do not pay attention... Some nurses do not enforce the rule and then all the other staff nurses receive aggravation from the families when they follow the guidelines. Another problem is families try to wake up sedated patients while they are on the ventilator or loosen or remove restraints while they are visiting and forget to replace them when they leave. Patient confidentiality is compromised when family members approach the nurses station.....we have glass doors on our rooms so all our patients are easily seen by the nurses....and unfortunately sometimes visitors....Do you have some of these same problems....
Aside from the red telephones and glass doors b/t your patients, I would think we worked at the same hospital based on what you just described.
Nothing irks me more than when you FINALLY get some buck-wild patient settled down and asleep for the family to come and wake him up, in spite of the fact you've explained to them to leave him alone.
Just a few weeks ago, we had this really wacko patient that even the most kindhearted and patient nurses could no longer deal with. We got the chief resident to come and talk to his even more wacko wife, where he explained to her ICU psychosis, lack of rest, etc. ad nauseum. After the resident left, she proceeded to bark at him in this awful, loud, gravelly voice that he needed to "CALM DOWN!!!!" Oh yeah, that helps...........
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